26.05.2022 Views

Pittwater Life June 2022 Issue

  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

FREE<br />

pittwaterlife<br />

A NEW VOICE FOR MACKELLAR<br />

REVEALED: THE DRAMATIC OVERHAUL FOR THE HEART OF AVALON<br />

PHOTOGRAPHER PIETER DE VRIES / LOCAL ISSUES FURY<br />

SEEN... HEARD... ABSURD... / HOT PROPERTY / THE WAY WE WERE


Editorial<br />

Mackellar enters bold new era<br />

Well, that escalated<br />

quickly! Seemingly<br />

overnight (figuratively<br />

speaking, given the seat had<br />

been a Liberal stronghold for<br />

73 years), Mackellar shifted<br />

its political allegiance,<br />

ushering in a new era with the<br />

election of Narrabeen doctor<br />

and ‘teal’ independent Dr<br />

Sophie Scamps to represent<br />

the community in Canberra.<br />

But Dr Scamps and her<br />

supporters are far from<br />

overnight successes, having<br />

started plotting their course<br />

more than two years ago, with<br />

more than 1200 volunteers<br />

engaging with locals in<br />

bedrock conversations about<br />

what they wanted not just for<br />

the future of our area, but for<br />

Australia as a whole.<br />

We congratulate Dr Scamps<br />

and place our trust in her to<br />

deliver on her promise.<br />

We also congratulate our<br />

former Member Jason Falinski<br />

for his two terms serving our<br />

community; having dealt with<br />

Mr Falinski in a professional<br />

capacity for six years, this<br />

magazine thought he was<br />

never anything but passionate<br />

and focused in his role as<br />

Mackellar MP.<br />

Indeed, given the result – as<br />

we went to print Mr Falinski<br />

had polled 41 per cent of first<br />

preference votes to Dr Scamps’<br />

39 per cent – for every voter<br />

waking up celebrating a Dr<br />

Scamps win, there was a voter<br />

waking up disappointed Mr<br />

Falinski had been unseated.<br />

Regardless of which way<br />

you voted, we should all<br />

get behind Dr Scamps; her<br />

enthusiasm, energy, approach<br />

and innovative ideas and<br />

agenda are a breath of fresh<br />

air that we can see will be<br />

welcomed not just from<br />

Collaroy to Palm Beach, but<br />

across the nation as well.<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 3


FREE LOCAL<br />

MONTHLY<br />

INDEPENDENT<br />

DISTRIBUTION<br />

32,000<br />

Delivered to householders<br />

& businesses throughout<br />

the <strong>Pittwater</strong> area at the<br />

beginning of each month.<br />

AFFORDABLE<br />

RATES &<br />

LONG-LIFE<br />

EXPOSURE<br />

CALL<br />

US TO<br />

DISCUSS<br />

YOUR AD!<br />

Tel: 0438 123 096<br />

PO Box 170<br />

Mona Vale 1660<br />

Email:<br />

info@pittwaterlife.com.au<br />

Website:<br />

pittwaterlife.com.au<br />

Publisher: Nigel Wall<br />

Managing Editor: Lisa Offord<br />

Graphic Design:<br />

Craig Loughlin-Smith<br />

Photography: Adobe / Staff<br />

Contributors: Rob Pegley,<br />

Rosamund Burton, Steve<br />

Meacham, Gabrielle Bryant,<br />

Beverley Hudec, Brian Hrnjak,<br />

Jennifer Harris, Nick Carroll,<br />

Janelle Bloom, Sue Carroll,<br />

Dr John Kippen, Geoff Searl.<br />

Distribution: John<br />

Nieuwenhof & Gill Stokes<br />

pitlifewalkers@gmail.com<br />

Published by<br />

Word Count<br />

Media Pty Ltd.<br />

ACN 149 583 335<br />

ABN 95 149 583 335<br />

Printed by Ovato<br />

P: 1800 032 472<br />

Vol 31 No 11<br />

Celebrating 31 years<br />

34<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

FREE<br />

pittwaterlife<br />

A NEW VOICE FOR MACKELLAR<br />

REVEALED: THE DRAMATIC OVERHAUL FOR THE HEART OF AVALON<br />

PHOTOGRAPHER PIETER DE VRIES / LOCAL ISSUES FURY<br />

SEEN... HEARD... ABSURD... / HOT PROPERTY / THE WAY WE WERE<br />

PWL_JUN22_p001.indd 1 25/5/<strong>2022</strong> 6:34 pm<br />

10<br />

66<br />

WALKERS<br />

WANTED<br />

Retirees, mums, kids to deliver<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> once a month.<br />

Permanent and casual runs<br />

may be available now in:<br />

Palm Beach, Avalon,<br />

Newport, Mona Vale,<br />

Bayview & Church Point.<br />

EARN TOP MONEY PAID PROMPTLY!<br />

Email:<br />

pitlifewalkers@gmail.com<br />

thislife<br />

INSIDE: Council has defended its inability to deliver its<br />

required LGA housing targets (p8); it has also moved to<br />

explain the new rate rise hitting residents in <strong>2022</strong>-23 (p12);<br />

Independent MP Dr Sophie Scamps reflects on becoming the<br />

first non-Liberal candidate to win the seat of Mackellar (p13);<br />

the community vents its frustrations over local issues (p18);<br />

Avalon’s major intersection is set for huge change (p22);<br />

and local cinematographer Pieter De Vries spins us a few<br />

entertaining yarns from his rich life story (p34).<br />

COVER: Angophora Shadow / Sharon Green<br />

XXXXX <strong>2022</strong><br />

also this month<br />

Editorial 3<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Local News 8-33<br />

The Way We Were 24<br />

Seen... Heard... Absurd... 26<br />

Briefs & Community News 28-33<br />

<strong>Life</strong> Story: Pieter De Vries 34-36<br />

Hot Property 38-45<br />

Art 46-47<br />

Surfing 48-49<br />

Health & Wellbeing; Hair & Beauty 50-57<br />

Money; Law 58-60<br />

Crossword 65<br />

Food & Tasty Morsels 66-69<br />

Gardening 70-72<br />

the goodlife<br />

Returning soon! Showtime, Pubs & Clubs and gigs!<br />

Inside this month: our regular features on food, gardening,<br />

beauty, health, surfing, art, local history, money, plus our<br />

guide to trades and services... and our essential maps.<br />

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!<br />

Bookings & advertising material to set for<br />

our JULY issue MUST be supplied by<br />

FRIDAY 10 JUNE<br />

Finished art & editorial submissions deadline:<br />

FRIDAY 17 JUNE<br />

The JULY issue will be published<br />

on WEDNESDAY 29 JUNEY<br />

COPYRIGHT<br />

All contents are subject to copyright and may not be reproduced except with the<br />

written consent of the copyright owner. All advertising rates are subject to GST.<br />

* The complete <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

<strong>Life</strong> archive can be found at<br />

6<br />

the State Library of NSW.<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


Beaches housing target<br />

hit by Granny Flat clause<br />

News<br />

Northern Beaches Council<br />

and the NSW Government<br />

are at loggerheads<br />

over housing targets after<br />

Council was found to have<br />

fallen well short of its initial<br />

five-year mandated requirement.<br />

Data from the Department<br />

of Planning and Environment<br />

identified Northern<br />

Beaches Council as one of 19<br />

Local Government Areas that<br />

failed to fulfil its 2016-2021<br />

obligations under the Greater<br />

Sydney Urban Development<br />

Program.<br />

A target of 3400 homes<br />

was set for Northern Beaches<br />

Council, yet only 2318 were<br />

built.<br />

However Mayor Michael<br />

Regan maintains the Government’s<br />

data is flawed as it did<br />

not take into account other<br />

types of housing and secondary<br />

dwellings, including<br />

‘granny flats’, seniors housing<br />

developments and boarding<br />

house rooms.<br />

Cr Regan told <strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong><br />

that despite Council’s many<br />

submissions on the matter, the<br />

Department of Planning and<br />

Environment was not willing,<br />

and in some cases not able, to<br />

count these developments as<br />

‘homes’.<br />

He said Council’s data<br />

showed that in the period<br />

2016-2021, 841 granny flats,<br />

259 seniors living units and<br />

268 boarding room houses<br />

were completed on the Northern<br />

Beaches – together with<br />

the 2318 other completed<br />

‘homes’ this equated to 3686<br />

new dwellings, which met the<br />

five-year-target.<br />

“Many of the barriers to<br />

housing targets are outside of<br />

local government’s control,”<br />

he said, adding: “We want<br />

all people on the Northern<br />

Beaches to be able to access<br />

affordable housing and we<br />

THEY DON’T COUNT:<br />

Granny Flats.<br />

are supportive of some housing<br />

growth to help achieve<br />

this, but there needs to be<br />

appropriate infrastructure in<br />

place to support this growth,<br />

including public transport,<br />

schools, open space and<br />

hospitals.”<br />

The State Government asked<br />

Northern Beaches Council<br />

to prepare a Local Housing<br />

Strategy to develop housing<br />

targets for 2021-2026, and<br />

2026-2036. Council adopted<br />

its Local Housing Strategy<br />

in April 2021, following two<br />

years of development and<br />

community consultation.<br />

The Strategy establishes<br />

targets of 3,582 new dwellings<br />

for the 2021-2026 period, and<br />

8,949 dwellings for the 2026-<br />

2036 period.<br />

Council’s Strategy anticipates<br />

that these targets can be<br />

readily achieved through the<br />

development of land already<br />

zoned for growth, together<br />

with an anticipated 4360 new<br />

dwellings created in the new<br />

Frenchs Forest centre / hospital<br />

precinct and through planning<br />

for other centres already<br />

underway.<br />

Cr Regan said key barriers<br />

to achieving housing targets<br />

included inadequate provision<br />

of infrastructure on the<br />

Northern Beaches to support<br />

growth.<br />

Council maintains new<br />

housing should be built within<br />

walking distance of centres<br />

where services are accessible<br />

and should not be built in<br />

areas subject to hazards such<br />

as bushfires and floods<br />

Also, the provision of social<br />

and affordable housing was<br />

a key issue – it’s estimated<br />

there is currently a shortfall<br />

of more than 8000 social and<br />

affordable housing dwellings<br />

on the Northern Beaches and<br />

that this is set to increase by<br />

an additional 2000 dwellings<br />

by 2036.<br />

“Council has set a target for<br />

itself to provide for the additional<br />

2000 dwelling shortfall<br />

however the State and Federal<br />

governments need to address<br />

existing shortages,” Cr Regan<br />

said.<br />

“Any targets for housing<br />

should not simply focus on<br />

supply of ‘market’ housing as<br />

this has been shown not to<br />

meaningfully improve affordability.”<br />

Council believes it is not<br />

apparent that the effect of<br />

the pandemic on population<br />

growth has been taken into<br />

account in the housing targets<br />

set by the state government.<br />

“Council’s housing consultants<br />

anticipate that population<br />

growth will have slowed significantly<br />

during the pandemic,<br />

reducing the demand for<br />

housing in the short-medium<br />

term,” Cr Regan said.<br />

“This cannot be confirmed<br />

until population projections<br />

by the state government are<br />

updated later this year.”<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

8 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


News<br />

History-making Scamps’<br />

vision for Mackellar<br />

Mackellar has voted for change, anti-corruption commission is legislated around their kitchen tables, in cafes and<br />

with ‘teal’ Independent Dr Sophie before the end of the year.<br />

our parks, and together, we have now<br />

Scamps riding a wave of community<br />

Also on her extensive to-do list is made history.<br />

support to create history and become<br />

the first non-Liberal local member in the<br />

seat’s 73-year history.<br />

Results three days after the May 21<br />

election, with votes from 47 of 48 places<br />

returned, showed former Liberal MP Jason<br />

Falinski polling 41.27 per cent (34,821) of<br />

the first preference count, followed by Dr<br />

Scamps with 39.28 per cent (33,142 votes).<br />

The remainder of the Mackellar ‘pie’<br />

was divided between Labor’s Paula Goodman<br />

(7.7 per cent), The Greens’ Ethan<br />

Hrnjak (5.7 per cent), UAP’s Christopher<br />

Ball (2.9 per cent), One Nation’s Darren<br />

Dickson (2.6 per cent) and The New Liberals’<br />

Barry Steele (0.54 per cent).<br />

However, after preferences, the Two Party<br />

preferred vote saw Dr Scamps clearly<br />

ahead with 44,625 votes (52.9 per cent) to<br />

Mr Falinski’s 39,736 votes (47.1 per cent).<br />

A euphoric Dr Scamps said her top priorities<br />

will be to hold Anthony Albanese’s<br />

Labor Government to account on climate<br />

change, while ensuring a strong federal<br />

improving our public hospital and mental<br />

health services.<br />

“I will pressure the incoming government<br />

to ensure Mackellar receives the<br />

funding it needs to improve [these] local<br />

services,” she said.<br />

Dr Scamps claimed victory around<br />

midnight on election night. She told nearly<br />

800 volunteers and supporters at Dee Why<br />

RSL that the community in Mackellar had<br />

voted emphatically for change and independent<br />

representation in Parliament.<br />

“This is an historic result, and I am<br />

incredibly humbled to be entrusted by our<br />

community to represent them in Parliament<br />

over the next three years,” she said.<br />

“The foundation of our success has<br />

been the amazing movement which<br />

involved over 1200 volunteers engaging<br />

with our community, listening to their<br />

concerns and campaigning with integrity<br />

and positivity.<br />

“Our campaign started over two years<br />

ago, listening to the concerns of locals<br />

“This victory has proved the power<br />

of community, and that when we come<br />

together Mackellar can achieve great<br />

things.”<br />

She said she promised to work “every<br />

day to be an MP that you can be proud of”.<br />

“I promise to be an MP that genuinely<br />

listens to our community and votes in a<br />

way that reflects the views and values of<br />

this community.<br />

“Finally, I promise to ensure our community<br />

is never taken for granted again in<br />

Parliament and that our voice is heard and<br />

respected.”<br />

Dr Scamps acknowledged the two terms<br />

of work delivered by Mr Falinski since<br />

2016.<br />

“While we may have disagreed over a<br />

range of policy issues and had our differences<br />

during the campaign, I also want to<br />

thank Jason Falinski for serving our community<br />

over the last six years,” she said.<br />

Prior to the election Mackellar was considered<br />

Liberal heartland. The party had<br />

held it continuously for 73 years, with Mr<br />

Falinski holding a seemingly insurmountable<br />

13.3 per cent advantage following the<br />

2019 election.<br />

But the incumbent MP became one of<br />

several ‘moderate’ Liberals wiped from<br />

office by the community-funded and Climate<br />

200-backed teal independents.<br />

As the Liberals’ soul-searching continued<br />

in the days after the drama-charged<br />

TEAL APPEAL:<br />

New Mackellar MP<br />

Dr Sophie Scamps<br />

celebrates with<br />

supporters.<br />

election result, senior moderate Liberal<br />

Simon Birmingham said his party had<br />

clearly not learned the lessons of former<br />

PM Tony Abbott’s 2019 defeat to Zali Steggall<br />

in Warringah.<br />

“We should have acknowledged that<br />

had broader implications than just related<br />

to Tony,” he said. “Now we’re paying the<br />

price for that.”<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

* Jason Falinski signs off – see page 13<br />

‘An ever-present risk’<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> State MP Rob Stokes is<br />

not taking the threat of a possible<br />

independent challenge lightly in the<br />

lead-up to the 2023 NSW Election.<br />

Mr Stokes, who defeated<br />

independent Alex McTaggart to take<br />

office in 2007, said history had shown<br />

that northern Sydney in particular has<br />

been prepared to back independents,<br />

especially in coastal areas.<br />

“Given I faced an independent,<br />

I know there is an ever-present<br />

risk of independents in seats like<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> and Manly and other coastal<br />

peninsula seats where there is one<br />

road in and one road out, and there<br />

is a strong sense of local identity,” Mr<br />

Stokes said.<br />

He acknowledged Dr Scamps and<br />

the ‘teal independents’ did well<br />

because they resonated with voters on<br />

key community-focused issues.<br />

“They brought a level of coordination<br />

and commonality on some<br />

of society’s big challenges, like climate<br />

change and integrity,” he said.<br />

“The state Liberals have a<br />

demonstrated record of addressing<br />

these themes in government – but<br />

we should not take [our results] as a<br />

reason to congratulate ourselves or<br />

rest on our laurels.”<br />

– NW<br />

News<br />

10 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 11


News<br />

Higher<br />

inflation<br />

triggers<br />

rates rise<br />

FIX: Paradise Beach pool.<br />

Northern Beaches Council is defending its <strong>2022</strong>-23 rates<br />

increases that will see the average household fork out an<br />

extra $37 a year.<br />

Council’s draft <strong>2022</strong>/23 budget – trumpeted with “a focus on<br />

resilience, renewal and recovery” – projects an operating surplus<br />

of $9.4 million, includes debt repayment of $5 million<br />

plus an $85-million investment in both new and<br />

renewed capital projects.<br />

Mayor Michael Regan admitted it had been a tough<br />

few years on the bottom lines of most businesses and<br />

organisations, adding Council had not been immune.<br />

“Fortunately, we went into the pandemic, and<br />

ensuing flood and storm events, in a strong financial<br />

position,” Cr Regan said.<br />

He said Council’s “prudent” expenditure and<br />

regular reviews had meant Council had been able to<br />

absorb the brunt of the impacts.<br />

“This budget is about getting back to basics, making<br />

sure our community infrastructure – our roads, footpaths,<br />

coastal and stormwater assets – are repaired and renewed which<br />

costs less for ratepayers in the long term,” he said.<br />

“We continue to pay down legacy debt, allocating another $5<br />

million in this draft budget. Since 2016, Council will have repaid<br />

$77 million in inherited debt, again strengthening our financial<br />

sustainability for the future.<br />

“Our focus continues to be on delivering on the priorities our<br />

community has confirmed – protecting and enhancing our environment,<br />

improving community infrastructure and providing<br />

quality services in a financially responsible way,” he said.<br />

A Council spokesperson said the draft budget proposed a<br />

modest increase to rates of 2.4 per cent which equated to an<br />

average increase of $37 per year for residents.<br />

“This supports Council in meeting increases in costs due to<br />

‘TOUGH’: Cr Regan.<br />

inflation like higher prices for fuel and construction materials,”<br />

the spokesperson explained.<br />

“This modest increase ensures Council maintains services at<br />

current levels and continues to invest in the renewal of community<br />

infrastructure assets.”<br />

They explained that each year the Independent<br />

Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) set the<br />

maximum amount rates can be increased by for all<br />

Councils in NSW.<br />

In December 2021, IPART announced the limit<br />

would be 0.7 per cent for the <strong>2022</strong>/23 financial year.<br />

“However this was based on outdated inflation<br />

information,” the spokesperson said.<br />

“With inflation currently at 5.1 per cent, the<br />

Minister for Local Government has established a<br />

process through the IPART for Council’s to apply for<br />

a higher increase that is consistent with the Council’s<br />

expected level of rating income (to a maximum<br />

of 2.5 per cent).”<br />

Consequently, Council has resolved to apply to IPART for approval<br />

to increase rates by 2.4 per cent.<br />

Highlights of the <strong>2022</strong>-23 draft Budget include:<br />

n $8.8 million for stormwater management projects – reducing<br />

stormwater runoff and improving stormwater quality entering<br />

the natural environment;<br />

n $7.6 million road re-sheeting – involving the renewal of<br />

10.7km of road in 25 suburbs. A further $1.5m is assigned to<br />

renew adjoining kerb and gutter where required;<br />

n $4.4 million footpaths – new and renewal;<br />

n Foreshore upgrades to seawalls at Bayview and improved access<br />

and landscaping at Warriewood Beach; and<br />

n Paradise Beach will share $1 million with Clontarf on the<br />

renewal of its tidal pool.<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

Falinski thanks community<br />

Former Liberal MP<br />

Jason Falinski says<br />

he remains proud of his<br />

team’s achievements<br />

since succeeding Bronwyn<br />

Bishop as the local<br />

federal member in 2016.<br />

In saying farewell to<br />

the local community, Mr<br />

Falinski described the<br />

past six years as “the<br />

greatest privilege of his<br />

life”.<br />

“As I did on Saturday<br />

night, I would once again<br />

like to congratulate<br />

Sophie Scamps on her<br />

victory in Mackellar,” Mr<br />

Falinski said in a public<br />

statement. “She is now<br />

my sitting member and I<br />

wish her all the success.<br />

“It has been the greatest<br />

privilege of my life<br />

to represent my community<br />

in the Australian<br />

parliament. I hope that<br />

Sophie enjoys it as much<br />

as I did.<br />

“I know that Australia’s<br />

best days are ahead of it,<br />

because we have so much<br />

to hope for and so little<br />

to fear.<br />

“Across the last six<br />

years I fought fiercely<br />

to guarantee our<br />

commitment to Net<br />

Zero, advancing new<br />

technologies for clean<br />

energy, making sure<br />

everyone can experience<br />

the Australian Dream in<br />

owning their own home,<br />

fighting for a taxpayer<br />

FAREWELL: Former Mackellar MP Jason Falinski.<br />

Bill of Rights, a better<br />

deal for our retirees and<br />

reforming employee<br />

share schemes to unlock<br />

a new wave of innovation<br />

in the Australian<br />

economy. Additionally, I<br />

tried to hold APRA, ASIC<br />

and the Reserve Bank to<br />

account.<br />

“Locally, we stopped<br />

gas and oil exploration<br />

off the Northern Beaches<br />

[PEP-11], secured funding<br />

for Wakehurst Parkway,<br />

funded phone towers<br />

at Belrose and Cottage<br />

Point, upgrades to our<br />

sports facilities including<br />

major developments<br />

at Long Reef Surf <strong>Life</strong><br />

Saving Club, secured<br />

additional support for<br />

our schools, backed local<br />

businesses and helped<br />

our community hubs<br />

transition to renewable<br />

energy.”<br />

He reserved special<br />

thanks to his family,<br />

staff and locals.<br />

“I want to thank my<br />

family who has sacrificed<br />

so much for me to be in<br />

service of the nation,” he<br />

continued.<br />

“Thank you to my<br />

staff who have worked<br />

tirelessly. I am incredibly<br />

proud of our record in<br />

always putting the Mackellar<br />

community first,<br />

especially making sure<br />

everyone had access to<br />

this office and providing<br />

every bit of assistance to<br />

those who needed it.<br />

“But most of all I want<br />

to thank you for the opportunity<br />

to serve as your<br />

Member for Mackellar.”<br />

– NW<br />

Have your say on<br />

Lagoon strategy<br />

proposed comprehensive strategy to<br />

A establish the most effective way to<br />

manage the Narrabeen Lagoon entrance<br />

to reduce the risk of flooding is currently<br />

on exhibition for community feedback.<br />

Council’s draft Narrabeen Lagoon<br />

Entrance Management Strategy focuses<br />

on all aspects of entrance management,<br />

including sand transport, flood benefits<br />

and entrance efficiency and dynamics.<br />

Following the extensive assessment<br />

and analysis the draft Strategy recommends<br />

that Council continue periodic<br />

large scale sand clearance operations;<br />

trial more frequent sand clearances<br />

but with smaller volumes, in targeted<br />

areas (as revealed by <strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> last<br />

month); continue intermittent mechanical<br />

breakouts if the lagoon entrance<br />

closes between major clearances and in<br />

response to forecast high rain and swells;<br />

revegetate and maintain Birdwood Park<br />

dune to assist sand stabilisation; and<br />

review mobile sand pumping (as an alternative<br />

to trucking) if lower cost pricing<br />

becomes available.<br />

Mayor Michael Regan said the main objective<br />

was to reduce the risk of flooding<br />

on the Narrabeen Lagoon floodplain.<br />

“Residents on the floodplain know<br />

too well the stress that comes every<br />

time there is forecast high rainfall, large<br />

swells or flood warnings,” Mayor Regan<br />

said. “The development of this draft<br />

strategy is about making sure we’ve canvassed<br />

all feasible options to reduce that<br />

stress, to reduce the risk and to make<br />

sure our lagoon management continues<br />

to follow best practice.<br />

The draft Strategy will be on exhibition<br />

until <strong>June</strong> 19 on the ‘Your Say’ page on<br />

Council’s website.<br />

– NW<br />

News<br />

12 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 13


100 YEARS IN FOCUS: Locals pose<br />

with a 15-foot shark hauled up next<br />

to the Customs Station wharf at<br />

Barrenjoey in 1923; La Corniche,<br />

Mona Vale; an early residence from<br />

the 1930s; and a painting of North<br />

Avalon Headland dated 1909.<br />

News<br />

Picture perfect<br />

Avalon Beach focus<br />

It’s finally here – after the disappointment<br />

of a COVID postponement last October, the<br />

Avalon Beach Historical Society is staging<br />

its 10th Great Historic Photographic Exhibition<br />

at the Avalon Recreation Centre over the <strong>June</strong><br />

long weekend.<br />

On show will be more than 1000 reproduced<br />

and original archive photos to help celebrate<br />

100 years of Avalon Beach.<br />

Society Presidents Geoff Searl says more<br />

than 60 different topics, areas and eras of<br />

local history represented.<br />

“It will be a historical feast for all who<br />

attend, from first-time visitors to locals<br />

familiar with our exhibition – you certainly<br />

won’t be disappointed,” Geoff said.<br />

One of the new display panels will be ‘Art<br />

and Artists of Avalon Beach’; it will feature 18<br />

A4 reproductions of paintings of North Avalon<br />

headland from 1862 to 2018. Included is one<br />

by Pro Hart of a series painted in the early<br />

1980s.<br />

“Also represented will be the early history<br />

of the Whale Beach Surf <strong>Life</strong> Saving Club<br />

along with St Marks Anglican Church and<br />

an intriguing pictorial history of the Bilgola<br />

Bends,” Geoff said.<br />

“Also, photographs of 18 residences from<br />

many eras will illustrate the varieties of<br />

shelters in which we have chosen to live in this<br />

amazing area.”<br />

Geoff said these great new subjects would<br />

complement some of the all-time favourites<br />

such as ‘Koalas’; ‘The Hole in the Wall’;<br />

‘St Michael’s Cave and the Ovens’; ‘Avalon<br />

Public School’; ‘Sharks’; the ‘Golf Links’; and<br />

‘Clareville Wharf’.<br />

The exhibition will be held in the main<br />

hall of the Avalon Recreation Centre in Old<br />

Barrenjoey Road, next to Dunbar Park and will<br />

be open on Saturday 11th, Sunday 12th and<br />

Monday 13th from 9am-5pm.<br />

“Admission charges are the same as they<br />

were 12 years ago – $5 per adult and children<br />

free,” Geoff said.<br />

Besides some publications for sale the Society<br />

will also have reproduced high resolution<br />

photos ready for framing, mugs with local<br />

photos printed on them and printed tea towels.<br />

Geoff said the exhibition would be the<br />

Society’s biggest in its 39 years of operations<br />

– collecting, correlating, categorising<br />

and disseminating the information and<br />

photographs to its members, the local schools,<br />

tertiary students and interested groups and<br />

individuals.<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

* More info abhs.org.au<br />

14 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


Newport’s big second<br />

News<br />

In April this year, Newport<br />

SLSC did the near impossible.<br />

Its competition team<br />

came second at the Australian<br />

SLS Championships.<br />

That might not seem unbelievable.<br />

After all the team,<br />

coached and competing under<br />

the aegis of Newport SLSC’s<br />

Kinghorn Surf Racing Academy,<br />

has pulled off a second<br />

place four times now over the<br />

past eight years — always to<br />

the same club, Northcliffe in<br />

Queensland.<br />

(Which is annoying but not<br />

embarrassing since Northcliffe<br />

has won the Aussies 14 times<br />

in a row.)<br />

But this year was different.<br />

The COVID-19 restrictions of<br />

2021 meant that here in NSW,<br />

unlike all the Queensland<br />

clubs, our squads were both<br />

starved of facilities and had to<br />

split up. No Gym time. Training<br />

in pairs, in ocean pools in<br />

the middle of winter. Being<br />

coached by remote control over<br />

Facebook. Sneakily meeting up<br />

a kilometre offshore for 20-kilometre<br />

ski paddles.<br />

It was one of those times that<br />

cause athletes to question their<br />

participation in a sport, much<br />

less encourage their will to win.<br />

Somehow none of this<br />

got in the way of some epic<br />

team performances. Original<br />

Academy duo Max Brooks and<br />

WINNERS: Under-15 Champion <strong>Life</strong>saver Bella Cox (left), Under-19 Double Ski<br />

Champs Bailey Clues and Harrison Taurins (top) and in action (right); and<br />

Open Single Surf Ski Champs Luke Morrison, Luke Jones and Greg Tobin.<br />

Jayke Rees won the double ski,<br />

Newport’s second gold in a row<br />

at this event. The open men’s B-<br />

Team – now and forever known<br />

as The Killer Bees – blitzed<br />

through a super strong field to<br />

win the ski relay. Powerhouse<br />

Jemma Smith took gold in the<br />

champion lifesaver, silver in the<br />

individual ski, and was tangled<br />

up in numerous other team<br />

successes. Young Arabella Cox<br />

covered herself with glory with<br />

a gold in the under-15 lifesaver,<br />

and the super-team of Harrison<br />

Taurins and Bailey Clues won<br />

the under-19 double ski at their<br />

first attempt.<br />

But it was the boys’ Under-<br />

17s who blew minds: the team<br />

produced the highest overall<br />

points score for an age group<br />

in the carnival’s history, in<br />

the process winning gold and<br />

silver in the hugely coveted<br />

Taplin teams event – a freakish<br />

achievement.<br />

These were highlights of<br />

what might be the club’s greatest<br />

team achievement to date.<br />

Let’s see what they can do with<br />

clear training air ahead of them<br />

in the coming year.<br />

– Nick Carroll<br />

* Nick was too humble to<br />

include himself in this report<br />

but it should be noted he won<br />

Gold in the 60-64yrs Iron; he is<br />

the only person to win both an<br />

Australian surfing title and an<br />

Aussie Iron title – Ed<br />

News<br />

16 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 17


News<br />

Locals have a say…<br />

Here’s some readers feedback on current<br />

issues across the Northern Beaches Council<br />

region, as reported by us in recent months…<br />

Council’s ‘arrogant’<br />

call on Parkway<br />

I am appalled by the arrogant<br />

over-ruling by Council of the<br />

concerned residents who took<br />

the care and time to study<br />

and respond to the detailed<br />

studies offered to address<br />

the perennial problem of<br />

Wakehurst Parkway flooding<br />

(<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>, May).<br />

We were cut off several<br />

times a week this past wet<br />

summer, reducing our exit<br />

roads to two (Mona Vale Rd<br />

and <strong>Pittwater</strong> Rd) – and not<br />

even those when <strong>Pittwater</strong> Rd<br />

flooded recently.<br />

Are we doomed to live in<br />

third world-like conditions?<br />

Seems this is good enough<br />

for this Regan-led Council.<br />

But apparently the majority<br />

of respondents wanting<br />

a solution or no flooding<br />

option is not good enough!<br />

More people will become<br />

aware of the significant<br />

limitations to living in the<br />

‘<strong>Pittwater</strong> Paradise’ area;<br />

this will impact not only<br />

the residents’ access in<br />

and out of the area, but it<br />

will also delay or see the<br />

cancellation of upgrades to<br />

retail areas, facilities and<br />

general improvements, plus<br />

an impact on real estate.<br />

It must give pause to<br />

people considering moving<br />

here who do need to travel<br />

beyond our LGA.<br />

Please, what can we do to<br />

call this Council to account?<br />

Name withheld<br />

Newport<br />

It’s litter-ally a<br />

local disgrace<br />

Re the Wakehurst Parkway:<br />

in addition to the issue of<br />

flood mitigation, what about<br />

the disgraceful management<br />

of the Parkway? There are<br />

broken trees and rubbish<br />

strewn along the length of<br />

the road and most recently<br />

barricade fencing has been<br />

damaged.<br />

It has been like this for<br />

more than a year and would<br />

have added to the recent<br />

flooding as drains were<br />

blocked by the rubbish and<br />

debris – much of it including<br />

plastic bottles and bags<br />

that would now be floating<br />

around Narrabeen Lake or in<br />

our oceans.<br />

Visitors to our prestigious<br />

Northern Beaches could be<br />

excused for thinking they<br />

were in Bali where there is no<br />

garbage control!<br />

I have approached Council<br />

twice – they fobbed me off to<br />

the RMS (Transport for NSW)<br />

who have given me a job<br />

number three times but made<br />

no comment on what they are<br />

going to do.<br />

Last November my<br />

daughter hit some fallen<br />

rock that blew out her tyre; I<br />

pushed that rock to the side<br />

of the road and told a passing<br />

police officer. Would you<br />

believe the rock is still on the<br />

side of the road!<br />

There has been dead<br />

wildlife including Wallabies<br />

lying on the side of the road<br />

for months.<br />

Whilst this is not just a<br />

Wakehurst Parkway issue, it<br />

seems that NSW is a victim<br />

of government lethargy,<br />

investment and care factor<br />

and is using COVID as the<br />

reason why we should put up<br />

with the filth!<br />

It appears there is<br />

a complete lack of<br />

acknowledgement of the<br />

environmental issues and<br />

road repairs, maintenance<br />

and hygiene. Probably all<br />

about the $$$!<br />

Bob Labrum<br />

Warriewood<br />

Tone-deaf Council<br />

wasting our time<br />

The Council’s decision to not<br />

progress the flood mitigation<br />

measures supported by<br />

community is pathetic. They<br />

seem intent on finding any<br />

possible way not to progress<br />

the job – which is simply to<br />

FIX… THE… ROAD.<br />

Imagine if they had been<br />

involved in the original<br />

decision to build it – clearly it<br />

would never have progressed<br />

at all. I shall be writing to<br />

my councillors to ask for an<br />

explanation of their complete<br />

disregard for the wishes<br />

of the community in this<br />

much-vaunted “consultation<br />

process” which appears<br />

to be a complete waste of<br />

everyone’s time.<br />

Richard Lewis<br />

Bayview<br />

E-scooters? Govt<br />

should Ban them!<br />

Thank you for the article on<br />

E-scooters (<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>,<br />

May). I spend a lot of time<br />

as a pedestrian, so this is an<br />

issue of great concern to me.<br />

I have had two run-ins<br />

recently with E-scooters.<br />

About two weeks ago I was<br />

waiting for a bus in shelter<br />

at the bus stop on Barrenjoey<br />

Road where it joins Avalon<br />

Parade. There are posters at<br />

each end of the shelter, so<br />

anyone coming along the<br />

footpath can’t see if there is<br />

a person in the shelter, and<br />

vice versa.<br />

I decided to walk over to<br />

look at the timetable. Just at<br />

that moment, an E-scooter<br />

with two boys in their late<br />

teens on it sped past on<br />

the footpath and narrowly<br />

missed hitting me. They<br />

were going very fast. As you<br />

mention in your article, the<br />

top speed of an E-scooter is<br />

25km per hour. If they had<br />

hit me, that would be a total<br />

weight of about 130+ kilos<br />

hitting me at 25km per hour;<br />

this would have resulted in<br />

serious injuries to me (and<br />

possibly to them too).<br />

The same thing happened a<br />

week later at the same place,<br />

although this time only one<br />

young man on the E-scooter.<br />

I was relieved to read in<br />

your article that E-scooters<br />

are not allowed on footpaths,<br />

but this rule needs to be<br />

enforced. A hefty fine would<br />

be a very effective deterrent.<br />

I appreciate the<br />

opportunity for your readers<br />

to give feedback on this<br />

important issue.<br />

Sylvia Saszczak<br />

Avalon Beach<br />

… E-skateboards a<br />

safety hazard too!<br />

I can report a near miss<br />

along the walkway around<br />

Narrabeen Lagoon for myself<br />

and dog, from an electric<br />

skateboard.<br />

As a local lady I walk every<br />

day along the lake and these<br />

motorised bikes, scooters<br />

and skateboards cause havoc<br />

to pedestrians and push-bike<br />

riders all the time.<br />

At speeds of 20km/h and<br />

more they are accidents<br />

waiting to happen; they<br />

should be banned.<br />

Jan Collins,<br />

Narrabeen<br />

Lizard Rock<br />

housing must<br />

not proceed<br />

Thank you for the useful<br />

article about Lizard Rock<br />

(<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>, April).<br />

In whatever way, our<br />

dwindling environmentally<br />

sensitive and culturally<br />

significant areas need to<br />

be preserved in perpetuity.<br />

Without them, we will create<br />

an increasingly barren,<br />

impoverished world of<br />

endless land developments<br />

and nowhere to escape this.<br />

Mayor Michael Regan’s idea<br />

to lease the Metropolitan<br />

Local Aboriginal Land<br />

Council’s landholdings on the<br />

Northern Beaches and care<br />

and manage them forever is<br />

a win-win for the Indigenous<br />

owners and for our broader<br />

community.<br />

This, or another<br />

creative way to keep this<br />

environmental jewel<br />

untarnished, has to happen.<br />

Glenn Barry,<br />

Newport<br />

News<br />

18 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 19


News<br />

Church Point postie Brian signs off<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong>’s offshore community<br />

has said farewell to its retiring<br />

Church Point postmaster Brian<br />

Dickeson after nearly 20 years’<br />

service.<br />

Brian (left) says he has seen<br />

plenty of change since he walked in<br />

the door in 2003 – especially over<br />

the past few years with the impact<br />

of COVID and lockdowns.<br />

In the months up to his retirement<br />

in early May, Brian estimates<br />

he was processing around 750<br />

parcels a week – up from the fewer<br />

than 400 parcels received prior to<br />

2020. And 70% of everything processed<br />

was for offshore folk.<br />

Since 1908, the local post<br />

office – now located within the<br />

busy General Store – has met the<br />

demands of the growing onshore<br />

and offshore community. Given<br />

there has never been a postie<br />

providing door-to-door mail drops<br />

to offshore <strong>Pittwater</strong>, it has always<br />

played an important role in the<br />

lives of islanders and western foreshore<br />

residents.<br />

Scotland Island resident Roy<br />

Baker observed: “The post office<br />

wasn’t always the sophisticated<br />

operation it is today. Within living<br />

memory, residents who wanted to<br />

check their mail simply walked in<br />

and gave their name, whereupon<br />

whoever was on hand would sift<br />

through a pile of alphabetically<br />

sorted letters.<br />

“Despite his daunting workload,<br />

Brian remained invariably efficient,<br />

affable and seemingly unflappable.<br />

He was more than our postman. He<br />

was at times an ad hoc lost property<br />

office, a place to leave messages<br />

for neighbours and friends, or the<br />

guardian of shopping bags while<br />

their owners went off to look for<br />

somewhere to park!”<br />

Brian says he will miss his daily<br />

interaction with offshore residents<br />

but intends to keep in touch. – NW<br />

Lizard Rock’s 1200 submissions<br />

The Department of Planning, Industry and<br />

Environment is currently poring over around<br />

1200 submissions it received on the draft State<br />

Environmental Planning Policy (SEPP) amendment<br />

and draft Northern Beaches Aboriginal<br />

Land Development Delivery Plan (DDP).<br />

The Department noted response focused on<br />

issues including bushland and environmental<br />

impacts, traffic, infrastructure, open space,<br />

bushfire and Aboriginal heritage.<br />

It said all submissions were being considered<br />

and summarised by an independent expert in an<br />

Exhibition Outcomes Report. The submissions<br />

and the report will be published on the Department’s<br />

website in the next few months.<br />

If the SEPP amendment and DDP are approved,<br />

the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council<br />

(MLALC) may lodge planning proposals or development<br />

applications with accompanying detailed<br />

site investigations. At this point there will be<br />

further opportunities for the public to provide<br />

feedback.<br />

The Department received many enquiries<br />

for more information about the benefits of the<br />

potential MLALC plans for Lizard Rock.<br />

In response, they posted a video on their<br />

website in which MLALC chief executive Nathan<br />

Moran talks about what the plans mean for Aboriginal<br />

people and the wider community.<br />

Mr Moran said any development on the Northern<br />

Beaches will help pay for broader Aboriginal<br />

community benefit schemes, including funerals,<br />

events, sponsorships and social housing.<br />

* More info planning.nsw.gov.au<br />

6THINGS<br />

THIS MONTH<br />

Meet Bluey and Bingo.<br />

Picnic in the Park returns to<br />

Narrabeen with music, dancing<br />

and entertainment for the kids<br />

featuring SplashDance and<br />

everyone’s favourite heelers Bluey<br />

and Bingo on Saturday 4 – two<br />

sessions 9.30am-11.30am and<br />

12.30pm-2.30pm; cost $15 per<br />

person (including children). More<br />

info Council website.<br />

Writing workshop. Join<br />

award-winning writer Jo Riccioni<br />

at Warringah Mall Library every<br />

Sunday in <strong>June</strong> from 1pm-3pm<br />

for this Creative Writing workshop<br />

series for adults. Suitable for<br />

all levels. Cost $100; bookings<br />

essential libraryprograms@<br />

northernbeaches.nsw.gov.au<br />

Keeping chooks. Learn how to<br />

keep chickens in your backyard<br />

and help the environment with<br />

Paul Canning and his happy hens<br />

at the Coastal Environment Centre<br />

North Narrabeen on Saturday 11<br />

from 10am-12pm or 1pm-3pm.<br />

Book on Council website.<br />

French music festival. Fete<br />

de la musique is an opportunity<br />

for all music performers to share<br />

their passion and indulge in<br />

French cuisine, wine and cultural<br />

experiences for the entire family<br />

on Sunday 19 from 9am-4pm at<br />

St Pauls Catholic College Manly.<br />

Details at sydneymusicfest.com.<br />

Chemical cleanout. The next<br />

Household Chemical CleanOut<br />

will be held at Mona Vale Beach<br />

car park on Sat 25 and Sun 26<br />

from 9.30am-3.30pm. Items<br />

that can be dropped off include<br />

up to 100L of paint (for free);<br />

household cleaners, pesticides<br />

and herbicides, poisons, motor<br />

fuels, fluorescent globes, acids,<br />

smoke detectors, gas bottles, fire<br />

extinguishers as well as car and<br />

household batteries. More info on<br />

EPA website or call 131555.<br />

Test your trivia. The team<br />

behind the Northern Beaches<br />

Readers Festival is holding a Trivia<br />

Night Fundraiser on Sat 25 from<br />

6.30pm-11.30pm at the Balgowlah<br />

RSL hosted by Lachlan Daddo.<br />

Tickets cost $60 and include<br />

dinner, silent auction, raffles and<br />

a lucky door prize too. Info at nbrf.<br />

com.au.<br />

News<br />

20 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 21


News<br />

Bypass plan for<br />

heart of Avalon<br />

BLOCKED: A truck on<br />

the centre median in<br />

front of residents’<br />

driveway.<br />

+ Double lines replace<br />

Avalon painted median<br />

The problematic and polarising<br />

heart of Avalon Beach – the<br />

intersection of Old Barrenjoey<br />

Road and Avalon Parade – is set for a<br />

dramatic overhaul following a $500,000<br />

cash injection by the NSW Government.<br />

A plan prepared by Northern Beaches<br />

Council in collaboration with the State<br />

Government will see a shared pedestrian<br />

and vehicle zone at the northern end<br />

of Old Barrenjoey Road, between the<br />

entrance to the Woolworths car park and<br />

Avalon Parade.<br />

The intersection’s northern pedestrian<br />

crossing will be scrapped, with northbound<br />

access up Old Barrenjoey Road<br />

removed and southbound traffic limited<br />

to one lane only with a 10km/h speed<br />

limit.<br />

Motorists driving into Avalon from<br />

Clareville will need to cross the intersection’s<br />

two pedestrian crossings, turn left<br />

at the lights into Barrenjoey Rd, then<br />

loop around into Avalon Parade to access<br />

the Woolworths car park.<br />

Under the plan, footpaths and road<br />

widths will be remodelled, with the<br />

northbound lane fitted out with new<br />

street furniture, similar to the wooden<br />

hubs installed in the Manly trial shared<br />

space in 2020.<br />

Member for <strong>Pittwater</strong> and Minister for<br />

Active Transport Rob Stokes said the<br />

Avalon Beach trial shared space would<br />

enable greater pedestrian opportunities<br />

through the expanded footpaths,<br />

new landscaping and additional seating<br />

areas.<br />

“This is all about supporting the<br />

vibrancy of the Avalon village, creating<br />

more open space and improving connectivity<br />

for pedestrians,” Mr Stokes said.<br />

“This concept has been talked about<br />

for decades – but the funding hurdles<br />

have always been prohibitive in seeing it<br />

launched.<br />

“This area of the village can be<br />

particularly busy with people moving<br />

between the shops, Dunbar Park, community<br />

facilities and the beach.<br />

“The opportunity to create additional<br />

open space for people to relax, dine and<br />

move around the village is really exciting.<br />

“Throughout COVID-19 we’ve seen a<br />

resurgence of people wanting to shop<br />

local, sit outdoors and explore the community.<br />

This project supports all of<br />

these elements and will provide a great<br />

case study for how the concept could be<br />

expanded elsewhere.”<br />

He added traffic arrangements at the<br />

MASSIVE CHANGE:<br />

An aerial view<br />

of the proposed<br />

Shared Pedestrian<br />

Zone, with oneway<br />

traffic only<br />

heading south<br />

from Woolworths<br />

car park.<br />

intersection of Avalon Parade and Old<br />

Barrenjoey Road would be simplified as<br />

a result of the reduction in approaching<br />

traffic lanes.<br />

Consideration will be made for more<br />

loading zones to be designated, with<br />

the existing Loading Zone near the<br />

Woolworths car park entrance slated for<br />

removal under the trial shared space.<br />

The other piece in the reconfiguring<br />

puzzle – the local bus stops and routes<br />

– will be adjusted to accommodate the<br />

changes.<br />

The announcement of the shared<br />

space trial coincides with Council<br />

presenting the final draft of the Avalon<br />

Beach Place Plan and outcomes of its<br />

community exhibition to the Avalon<br />

Community Reference Group, made up of<br />

local residents, local community groups<br />

and business representatives.<br />

It is anticipated that the draft Avalon<br />

Beach Place Plan will also be tabled at<br />

Council’s July meeting.<br />

Once the Avalon Beach Place Plan<br />

is adopted, Mayor Michael Regan said<br />

Council would consider the Streets as<br />

Shared Spaces Program on Old Barrenjoey<br />

Road later in the year.<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> understands that the<br />

State Government’s $500,000 grant will<br />

be forfeited if not used before the end of<br />

<strong>2022</strong>. – Nigel Wall<br />

* What do you think? Email readers@<br />

pittwaterlife.com.au<br />

‘Finally!’ –<br />

say affected<br />

residents<br />

Commercial photographer Des Harris<br />

has lived in Avalon for 22 years<br />

– for the past six on the western side<br />

of Old Barrenjoey Rd.<br />

He knows all too well the dangers<br />

and challenges the painted median<br />

has thrown up during the past decade.<br />

“I regularly have issues trying to<br />

turn out of my car park to head up to<br />

the roundabout at ‘Kamikaze Corner’,<br />

mostly from cars parked across<br />

the median strip blocking my way<br />

(above),” he told <strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>.<br />

“I have had polite interactions with<br />

the drivers, advising them it’s illegal<br />

and that they are blocking emergency<br />

access from residences.<br />

“I am either met with aggro, or they<br />

look around and say ‘everyone else<br />

is doing it’, or ‘I’m only going to be a<br />

minute’.”<br />

Mr Harris says it takes him 40<br />

seconds to drive from his apartment<br />

south down Old Barrenjoey Rd to the<br />

Bilgola roundabout – as opposed to up<br />

to seven minutes if he’s forced to turn<br />

north and negotiate the centre of the<br />

village.<br />

“The removal of the painted median<br />

strip and new double yellow lines<br />

removes any doubt about whether you<br />

can park there – especially among<br />

tourists, visitors and diners who see<br />

all the cars parked there and think it<br />

must be okay.<br />

“People who have done so will continue,<br />

but less often, given the area is<br />

more likely to be patrolled and more<br />

fines issued. They can’t fall back on<br />

‘reasonable doubt’ anymore.<br />

“There are double yellow lines<br />

north, down by Spaghetti 75, and<br />

south towards the school – and no-one<br />

parks across them.”<br />

Mr Harris supports the mooted pedestrian<br />

shared space trial, with some<br />

reservations.<br />

“There is a massive shortage of<br />

loading zones along Old Barrenjoey<br />

Road; while I love the pedestrianisation<br />

of the area, losing commercial<br />

parking is a big issue.”<br />

– NW<br />

22 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

Northern Beaches Council will<br />

remove the controversial painted<br />

median strip markings in the<br />

centre of Old Barrenjoey Road at Avalon<br />

next month and replace them with<br />

unbroken double yellow lines.<br />

The new lines will splay out and<br />

around existing tree plantings.<br />

The move is aimed at increasing<br />

safety within a precinct frequented by<br />

hundreds of local school children each<br />

day.<br />

It’s also designed to discourage illegal<br />

parking in the centre of the road – by<br />

shoppers and delivery trucks – while<br />

residents living on the western side of<br />

the road can now legally cross the road<br />

and turn right, enabling the quickest<br />

point of exit from the village.<br />

Council will also consider adding new<br />

loading zone bays to the area, affording<br />

delivery truck drivers who flaunt rules<br />

by parking and offloading in the centre<br />

of the road somewhere nearby to park<br />

and offload legally.<br />

Additionally, any ambiguity<br />

surrounding the legality of motorists<br />

crossing from one side of the road to<br />

park their cars in bays on the other has<br />

been erased; such crossings will attract a<br />

hefty fine.<br />

The painted median which stretches<br />

around 150 metres through the southern<br />

side of Avalon has been a bone of<br />

contention since the former <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

Council introduced them in 2012.<br />

Angry locals and community groups<br />

have appealed to successive <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

and Northern Beaches Councils to get<br />

them removed.<br />

Chairman of the Pedestrian Council of<br />

Australia Harold Scruby said the danger<br />

to schoolchildren at Avalon Primary<br />

School had been ignored for far too long.<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

SET TO END:<br />

The danger posed<br />

to pedestrians<br />

by cars parked<br />

across the centre<br />

median on Old<br />

Barrenjoey Road<br />

at Avalon.<br />

“There are a thousand children at<br />

Avalon Primary School which is less than<br />

50 metres from this centre median,” he<br />

said.<br />

“Every day you see scores of them<br />

crossing this median between large<br />

AWDs, trucks and buses – and there is<br />

no line of sight.<br />

“And for over a decade <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

and Northern Beaches Councils did<br />

absolutely nothing; it’s been road safety<br />

with fingers crossed!”<br />

Mr Scruby said he remained<br />

disappointed Council did not leave the<br />

road without markings.<br />

“At least the penalty for stopping on a<br />

double line will go from $116 on a media<br />

to $275-plus – and most motorists won’t<br />

normally stop there, whereas the painted<br />

median looked like a parking bay.”<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Ward Councillor Michael<br />

Gencher said many frustrated Avalon<br />

locals had approached him about the<br />

painted median and the ongoing safety<br />

issues it presented.<br />

“I’m also glad to see that Council is<br />

considering additional Loading Zones<br />

along the existing kerb space.<br />

“I am aware that many locals like the<br />

convenience and ease of parking down<br />

the painted medium strip, as do the<br />

delivery drivers and local businesses<br />

– however it is illegal, inconvenient,<br />

frustrating, and carries significant<br />

potential safety issues.”<br />

“The proposed solution will offer a<br />

balance and compromise to the concerns<br />

of both residents and businesses.”<br />

Council said any change in parking<br />

restrictions involving the new loading<br />

zones would be placed on public<br />

consultation during <strong>June</strong> and referred<br />

to Council’s Local Traffic Committee<br />

for consideration at the end of the<br />

consultation period. – Nigel Wall<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 23<br />

News


The Way We Were<br />

Every month we continue to pore over three decades of <strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>, providing a<br />

snapshot of the area’s recent history – and confirming that quite often the more things<br />

change, the more they stay the same! Compiled by Lisa Offord<br />

25 Years Ago…<br />

The Way We Were<br />

Of the “$21.4 million that <strong>Pittwater</strong> Council plans to raise in<br />

rates in the next financial year $14.8 million will be spent on<br />

wages, salaries and other employee costs.” Residential rates<br />

were up by 2.9%, commercial 3.6%<br />

and farmland (about 20 properties)<br />

3.1%. “This means that the average<br />

rate per household in <strong>Pittwater</strong> is<br />

now $875, compared with $717 in<br />

the 1994-95 year.” An “upmarket”<br />

Clancy’s Supermarket was mooted<br />

for Avalon. Meanwhile, Franklins’<br />

plans for upgrading its store “are<br />

advancing and it too will include<br />

some fresh food counters… it will<br />

also carry farm produce though it<br />

is believed that with will cater more<br />

for late shoppers rather than go into<br />

competition with the existing fruit<br />

and vegetable shops.” In other news,<br />

Avalon Primary School’s multipurpose<br />

centre was ready, with expressions of<br />

interest sought for operating pre- and<br />

after-school childcare in the building.<br />

“Avalon Primary with 880 children<br />

is one of the largest primary schools<br />

in the state.”; NSW TAB confirmed<br />

15 Years Ago…<br />

Council staff withdrew<br />

support for plans to<br />

build a privately funded<br />

Olympic-sized swimming<br />

pool at Boondah Reserve<br />

Warriewood, with<br />

suggestions the project<br />

could take another 10 years<br />

“to materialise into anything<br />

concrete… by that time<br />

the opportunity to build a<br />

community pool with be<br />

lost…” A Pool for <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

spokesman adding: “While<br />

the Council may be able<br />

to constantly put this issue<br />

on the backburner, the<br />

demands of the community<br />

can no longer allow this<br />

issue to be delayed and<br />

frustrated.” The inaugural Avalon Village Festival was to be held<br />

this month; new State MP Rob Stokes wrote about the campaign<br />

to save Currawong from the “wrecking ball” and his support in<br />

pushing for it to be recognised as a Heritage site to afford it “full<br />

protection”; Woolworths received approval from council for a<br />

fuel outlet and convenience store on Barrenjoey Road Newport;<br />

and Peninsula Music Club hosted a night of Latin American<br />

music with the group Tiempo De Tango.<br />

the Avalon TAB’s future was in doubt: “… it has not been<br />

consistently making the turnover of $40,000 a week which the<br />

TAB insists upon”; A Motel was proposed for Avalon adjacent<br />

to the Youth Hostel and the mag<br />

launched a computer column “… the<br />

most common question asked about the<br />

Internet is just what can it be used for?”<br />

In a special food feature Countrywide<br />

Meats in Clareville was championing its<br />

“guaranteed country killed” beef, lamb,<br />

and pork “… from the farm gate to the<br />

dinner plate!” Avalon Organics had free<br />

apple tasting daily and was promoting<br />

a $35 family box of “purity guaranteed<br />

organic produce”; you could enjoy<br />

a 2-course meal and coffee at Le<br />

Boulevard for $25 a head and lunch<br />

at the Avalon RSL for just $2 every<br />

Tuesday. In property news, LJ Hooker<br />

sold a three-year-old, five-bedroom<br />

house opposite the beach at 439<br />

Barrenjoey Road Newport for $806,000<br />

and a small waterfront block with a<br />

“knockdown cottage” at 208 Hudson<br />

Pde Clareville for $680,000.<br />

5 Years Ago…<br />

We featured a “Dummies Guide to the B-Line” as the State<br />

Government revealed Newport would be the point of<br />

origin and termination for buses. We observed that the<br />

announcement “begs the question of how the buses will turn<br />

around at Newport; we understand that will occur adjacent<br />

to the Newport Surf <strong>Life</strong>saving Club”. In the lead up to the<br />

Council election we sat down with the man who aspired<br />

to be Northern Beaches Council’s first Mayor, Michael<br />

Regan. Now-Councillor Miranda Korzy wrote about the<br />

“local resident activist group” Protect <strong>Pittwater</strong> Association<br />

“… who say all residents in the former <strong>Pittwater</strong> Council<br />

region must support a<br />

campaign for the return<br />

of <strong>Pittwater</strong> Council if they<br />

want to regain control of<br />

local decision making.” It<br />

was reported the walkway<br />

between Palm Beach Wharf<br />

and Governor Phillip Park<br />

was expected to be up<br />

and running by Christmas<br />

and the boundaries of the<br />

Narrabeen Lagoon State<br />

Park were increased by<br />

50 per cent to support<br />

facilities for public<br />

recreation and protect the<br />

natural habitat.<br />

24 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


News<br />

NOT SEEN…<br />

Were you letterbox-dropped by the Sophie Scamps camp asking<br />

to contribute to final-week federal election campaign initiatives<br />

(“We need something different to grab people’s attention!”)<br />

and were wondering what happened to the five-metre blimp<br />

the team planned to have fly the teal independent message<br />

in the countdown to the polls? Seems Council grounded the<br />

idea. “There are rules on where and how political candidates<br />

can advertise on public land,” Council CEO Ray Brownlee told<br />

us. “This request went beyond what the controls allow and,<br />

under the legislation, would have required Council consent via<br />

a development application.” True – a DA! Council further told<br />

us it received requests to place an advertising balloon with<br />

branding for Dr Sophie Scamps at Boondah Reserve in Warriewood<br />

from 16-21 May and Village Park in Mona Vale on 21 May.<br />

“Based on the location and size of the balloon it was determined<br />

that development consent would be required under the<br />

Environmental Planning and Assessment Act. The proponent<br />

was advised they would need a DA for Boondah Reserve, but no<br />

DA was received. In regards to Village Park, the proponent was<br />

advised that requests to use Council’s open spaces should be<br />

aligned with the community recreational purpose and zoning<br />

of the land – and at this location, political advertising was not<br />

aligned to this purpose.” Lesson learned? Submit the DA early<br />

for 2025! (PS was going to be zero emissions.)<br />

SEEN…<br />

Local artist Helen Proctor has revealed her latest mural and<br />

new addition to Council’s Street Art collection, ‘Narrabeen<br />

Lagoon <strong>2022</strong>’. The mural (below), an abstract depiction of the<br />

waterways and bushland around Narrabeen, wraps around the<br />

Narrabeen Tramshed Community Centre. The artist says her<br />

interpretation of the landscape pulls our focus towards the<br />

unique colours and shapes of the area, and complements “the<br />

natural vibrancy of a place that we all know so well”.<br />

HEARD…<br />

A group of locals have banded to<br />

recognise Midget Farrelly as our<br />

own first male world surfing champion<br />

(and local hero) by commencing<br />

a fundraising campaign to design<br />

and install a life-sized statue<br />

of Midget at his spiritual home,<br />

Palm Beach (concept pictured).<br />

Co-Chair of the Midget Farrelly<br />

Recognition Committee, Gordon<br />

Lang, said Northern Beaches Council had approved the<br />

concept and were actively supporting the project, along with patron<br />

Beverlie Farrelly. More info MidgetRecognition@gmail.com<br />

ABSURD...<br />

Many readers have asked us how it is that the condition and upkeep<br />

of <strong>Pittwater</strong>’s roads appears to have deteriorated under the<br />

watch of new contractor Connect Sydney. Certainly we reached<br />

out to Council recently to ask if they were happy with the deliverables<br />

in their contract, and were told everything was peachy<br />

keen (not their words). One reader, who asked they not be named,<br />

took the matter up with Connect Sydney. Their response was<br />

forwarded to us. Here’s an edited version: “Thank you for your<br />

correspondence… I note your request and appreciate your concerns<br />

about the condition of some roads… Transport for NSW is confident<br />

that Connect Sydney is meeting its contractual obligations since<br />

operationalising them on 1 July 2021. This view is derived from<br />

monthly reports detailing Connect Sydney’s performance against<br />

detailed and comprehensive key performance indicators. In addition,<br />

Transport for NSW has an experienced and professional team<br />

managing the Connect Sydney contract and overseeing Connect<br />

Sydney’s operational responsibilities.” There you have it – we<br />

don’t have a problem. Apparently. Maybe they should be called<br />

‘Disconnect <strong>Pittwater</strong>’ instead?<br />

26 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


News<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> News<br />

Musicals on song<br />

There’s no need to travel<br />

far from home to enjoy live<br />

performances from world<br />

class musicians,<br />

thanks to the<br />

Peninsula Music<br />

Club.<br />

This month,<br />

well-known pianist<br />

John Martin and<br />

rising star vocalists<br />

Kirralee Hillier<br />

(pictured) and<br />

Matthew Avery<br />

will present an<br />

afternoon filled with songs<br />

from much-loved musicals<br />

and opera classics.<br />

‘Colours of the Heart’, at St<br />

Luke’s Grammar School on<br />

Sunday <strong>June</strong> 19, will feature<br />

delightful favourites from<br />

Rogers & Hammerstein,<br />

Lerner and Lowe, Sondheim,<br />

They may not wear<br />

capes or costumes like<br />

Ironman or Wonder Woman<br />

but everyday superheroes<br />

from the Northern<br />

Beaches Social Riders Club<br />

unleashed their hidden<br />

superpowers by embarking<br />

on a 330km Sydney<br />

to Canberra scooter ride<br />

last month, in the lead up<br />

to the annual Hero For<br />

HeartKids in <strong>June</strong>.<br />

Commencing on May 7<br />

at Terrey Hills Tavern,<br />

the riders raised funds<br />

for HeartKids along their<br />

journey to generate awareness<br />

of the prevalence of<br />

congenital heart disease<br />

Cole Porter and more.<br />

It’s the second of the Club’s<br />

four concerts for <strong>2022</strong>; next<br />

up on Friday October 7 is a<br />

performance by<br />

Italy’s Alexander<br />

Gadjiev, the<br />

winner of<br />

The Sydney<br />

2021 (formerly<br />

the Sydney<br />

International<br />

Piano<br />

Competition of<br />

Australia). And<br />

on November 11,<br />

club favourite – pianist and<br />

composer Dr Daniel Rojas –<br />

will perform from his new<br />

album of mambo, tango and<br />

Latin folk music featuring the<br />

Apex string quartet.<br />

One of the highlights<br />

of these events is the<br />

opportunity to meet the<br />

performers at sparkling wine<br />

suppers served after each<br />

concert.<br />

More information at<br />

peninsulamusicclub.com.au<br />

Probus/community<br />

Club meeting news<br />

Palm Beach and Peninsula<br />

Probus Club’s next meeting is<br />

Wednesday 15th <strong>June</strong>, 9.30am<br />

at Club Palm Beach (formerly<br />

the RSL), 1087 Barrenjoey<br />

Road. There is plenty of<br />

off-street parking and the<br />

Palm Beach-Manly bus stop is<br />

just outside. Membership is<br />

open to retirees and visitors<br />

are very welcome. The<br />

speaker is Merinda Ayre, a<br />

volunteer guide at the<br />

Australian National Maritime<br />

Museum. Her particular<br />

interest is the history of the<br />

original HMB Endeavour<br />

and the men who served<br />

‘Superhero’ fundraiser effort<br />

in Australia. Stops along<br />

the way included Bargo,<br />

Goulburn before reaching<br />

their final destination in<br />

Canberra, with families at<br />

each stop cheering along<br />

the riders and posing for<br />

photos on the motorbikes.<br />

Leading the convoy was<br />

Club President, Santiago<br />

Padilla, who was thrilled<br />

to support those affected<br />

by childhood heart disease<br />

who fight their own<br />

battle for survival and<br />

rely on the many support<br />

services that HeartKids<br />

provides.<br />

“As long-time supporters<br />

of HeartKids, the riders<br />

were very excited to<br />

finally be able to get back<br />

on their bikes and help<br />

after this event was put<br />

on hold due to COVID-19<br />

restrictions. “After almost<br />

10 years of supporting<br />

the HeartKids Heart Bead<br />

program, we thought Hero<br />

for HeartKids would be a<br />

fun way to reconnect with<br />

the HeartKids community<br />

and acknowledge their<br />

courage as true heroes.<br />

It warmed our hearts to<br />

be able to do something<br />

for this community while<br />

raising over $2,000 to go<br />

into supporting families<br />

and ongoing services.”<br />

in her who survived the<br />

arduous trip to Tahiti, New<br />

Holland, Batavia and back<br />

to England. Enquiries to<br />

Carmel 0414 978 465 or<br />

Patricia 0481 395 624. U3A,<br />

which promotes learning,<br />

creativity and community<br />

interaction for retirees, meets<br />

twice a month at Newport<br />

Community Centre. On <strong>June</strong><br />

1, presenter Laurie Wilson<br />

will deliver a talk on the<br />

‘Photographs which made<br />

Australia’ – looking at 12<br />

iconic images from 1845 to<br />

2013. Laurie is a retired CSIRO<br />

scientist and a frequent<br />

speaker to U3A, Probus and<br />

camera clubs, especially on<br />

his passions of science and<br />

photography. On <strong>June</strong> 28,<br />

climate change advocate<br />

Felicity Davis will deliver a<br />

talk on ‘Electrification of the<br />

home’. She will address issues<br />

including the definition of<br />

‘net zero emissions’. Both<br />

meetings run 1.30-3.30pm.<br />

Avalon, Mona Vale<br />

Place Plans near<br />

Northern Beaches Council<br />

is currently preparing the<br />

Draft Mona Vale Place Plan.<br />

Council says two Mona<br />

Vale Project Working Group<br />

meetings have been held,<br />

with a third scheduled in<br />

mid-<strong>June</strong>. It is anticipated<br />

that the draft Mona Vale Place<br />

Plan will be tabled at the July<br />

Council Meeting. If endorsed<br />

by Council, the Place Plan<br />

will be placed on public<br />

exhibition for community<br />

feedback. Meanwhile, Council<br />

has presented the final<br />

draft of the Avalon Beach<br />

Place Plan and outcomes of<br />

the community exhibition<br />

to the Avalon Community<br />

Reference Group, made<br />

up of local residents, local<br />

community groups and<br />

business representatives. It<br />

is anticipated that the draft<br />

Avalon Beach Place Plan will<br />

also be tabled at the July<br />

Council meeting. Following<br />

the adoption of the Place<br />

Plan, Council will consider<br />

a ‘Streets as Shared Spaces<br />

Program’ in a section of old<br />

Barrenjoey Road, Avalon<br />

Beach later in the year (see<br />

page 22).<br />

Single-use plastic<br />

Bags are banned<br />

The NSW Government’s ban<br />

on lightweight plastic bags<br />

comes into force on <strong>June</strong> 1.<br />

Minister for Environment<br />

James Griffin said the<br />

lightweight plastic bag ban<br />

is the first of many plastic<br />

items being banned in NSW<br />

this year. “From November,<br />

we’re banning more<br />

problematic plastics, such as<br />

cutlery and plates,” he said.<br />

“Single-use plastic is used<br />

by many of us for just a few<br />

convenient minutes, but it<br />

remains in our environment<br />

for many years, eventually<br />

Continued on page 30<br />

News<br />

28 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 29


News<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> News<br />

Continued from page 29<br />

breaking into microplastics.<br />

“Single-use plastic items<br />

and packaging make up 60<br />

per cent of all litter in NSW.<br />

By stopping the supply of<br />

problematic plastic in the<br />

first place, we’re helping<br />

prevent it from entering our<br />

environment as litter, or<br />

going into landfill.” The ban<br />

will prevent almost 2.7 billion<br />

items of plastic litter from<br />

entering the environment in<br />

NSW over the next 20 years.<br />

So-called “compostable” and<br />

“bioplastic” alternatives will<br />

also be banned as they don’t<br />

biodegrade unless they’re<br />

treated in an industrial<br />

composting facility, creating<br />

just as much of a problem as<br />

conventional plastic.<br />

Downhill movie rush<br />

For one night only Newportbased<br />

business, Adventure<br />

Entertainment, will screen the<br />

ski and snowboard adventure<br />

film ‘Winter Starts Now’ at<br />

Glen Street Theatre as part<br />

of the annual Warren Miller<br />

Snow Film Tour on Thursday<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2.<br />

‘Winter Starts Now’ is the<br />

72nd film from Warren Miller<br />

Entertainment celebrating all<br />

things winter – it’s a stunning<br />

ski and snowboarding<br />

film that chases the US winter<br />

from coast to coast leaving<br />

audiences inspired by the<br />

spectacular jumps and views<br />

from the top.<br />

The screening at Glen Street<br />

Theatre is a hosted event with<br />

prize giveaways including the<br />

chance to win a $20,000 trip<br />

of a lifetime to Canada.<br />

Tickets from $25 available<br />

from glenstreet.com.au<br />

Headland toilets<br />

by end of year<br />

Public toilets at Barrenjoey<br />

Headland are a step closer<br />

following public exhibition<br />

of plans. The lack of toilet<br />

facilities on the headland,<br />

a walking destination for<br />

approximately 200,000 visitors<br />

each year, has resulted in<br />

ongoing waste and litter issues<br />

(the closest public restrooms<br />

are in the car park at Station<br />

Beach). In 2019, transportable<br />

toilets were installed by NSW<br />

National Parks and Wildlife<br />

Service (NPWS) as a temporary<br />

solution, pending planning for<br />

a permanent structure. Plans<br />

have been revealed to build a<br />

permanent amenities block,<br />

southeast of the keeper’s<br />

quarters and lighthouse. The<br />

proposed public amenities<br />

building will be set into the<br />

landscape, concealed by the<br />

landform and native heath.<br />

The toilet cubicles are planned<br />

to be unisex, with baby<br />

change facilities and a water<br />

refill station. If given the goahead<br />

upon review of public<br />

consultation, it’s anticipated<br />

construction will commence<br />

by October.<br />

Crown land grants<br />

Crown land across NSW is<br />

set to be improved, after the<br />

NSW Government reserved<br />

$17 million to upgrade and<br />

maintain facilities across<br />

the state. Minister for Lands<br />

and Water Kevin Anderson<br />

said the Government was<br />

committed to providing the<br />

best facilities possible. “The<br />

Crown Reserves Improvement<br />

Fund will support upgrades to<br />

facilities used by organisations<br />

that are at the heart of our<br />

communities, like surf<br />

lifesaving clubs, showgrounds,<br />

scouts and girl guide groups,<br />

pony clubs and PCYC,” Mr<br />

Anderson said. “These grants<br />

will help communities as<br />

Continued on page 32<br />

Play a little bit sharky<br />

Northern Beaches Youth Theatre is back in <strong>June</strong> with another<br />

exciting production – ‘School of Sharks’, by young<br />

Australian playwright Jessica Bellamy.<br />

It’s described as a “worrying, watery adventure” that will<br />

have you smiling at the parallels with our own sea-surrounded<br />

peninsula – and wondering what really does go on<br />

in the minds of our dwindling sea life.<br />

The protagonist is a big worrier and why wouldn’t she be<br />

living on an isthmus surrounded by mistreated sharks and<br />

a climate that is in real trouble?<br />

This is touted as a fun play about the very real concerns<br />

of our youth and how we all can all grow and deal with<br />

these complex issues. The play is also a catalyst for many<br />

conversations about how to be eco-conscious and live sustainably.<br />

There will also be workshopping with the playwright, Jessica<br />

Bellamy.<br />

Performances are 6.30pm on <strong>June</strong> 16, 18, 23 and 25; also<br />

matinee performances 2.30pm<br />

<strong>June</strong> 18 and 25.<br />

Tickets and info at trybooking.com/BZIDR<br />

News<br />

30 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 31


News<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> News<br />

Continued from page 31<br />

they get back on their feet,<br />

by funding improvements<br />

to community, recreational<br />

and tourism facilities on<br />

Crown reserves, while also<br />

supporting local businesses<br />

and economies within our<br />

great regions.”<br />

Last year’s Crown Reserves<br />

Improvement Fund provided<br />

$15.233 million in grants for<br />

257 projects across NSW that<br />

benefited local communities.<br />

Eligible applicants include<br />

community groups who<br />

use Crown land, and all<br />

showgrounds including those<br />

on freehold land, for projects<br />

that can deliver social, cultural,<br />

environmental or economic<br />

benefits. Applications<br />

close 3 <strong>June</strong>; more info<br />

reservemanager.crownland.<br />

nsw.gov.au.<br />

New green carpet<br />

for local football<br />

Environmental and safety<br />

concerns were key drivers<br />

during Council’s recent<br />

refurbishment of the<br />

synthetic turf surface at<br />

Cromer Park.<br />

Council says it replaced the<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Probus<br />

gets a new home<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Men’s Probus Club has a new home from <strong>June</strong> – the<br />

new Mona Vale Surf Club. The occasion will be marked with a<br />

celebration during their next monthly meeting on Tuesday <strong>June</strong><br />

14, which will include a <strong>Pittwater</strong> video presentation by local<br />

identity John Illingsworth.<br />

The club dates back 41 years; records show an ad in the<br />

Manly Daily advising of its formation with the first meeting<br />

planned for December 1980 at the <strong>Pittwater</strong> RSL Club. However,<br />

the actual meeting took place in January 1981, attended<br />

by 11 founding members and with George Cockburn voted in<br />

as the first President.<br />

The club conducted its early monthly get-together meetings<br />

at the <strong>Pittwater</strong> RSL, later moving to the Mona Vale Golf Club<br />

where it stayed for many years before the COVID pandemic<br />

struck. After a short break, the club resumed meetings at<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> RSL. (A belated 40th Anniversary party is planned<br />

once the club is settled into its new home.)<br />

Next meeting 14th <strong>June</strong> commences at 10am; visitors and<br />

partners welcome. More info Terry Larke (0412 220 820).<br />

surface for local football<br />

clubs with the hope it will<br />

attract A-League teams to<br />

play on the Northern Beaches.<br />

Field 1 at Cromer Park has<br />

been upgraded with a new<br />

generation synthetic turf<br />

surface, as the previous one<br />

(11 years old) had reached<br />

its lifespan. The works were<br />

completed with natural cork<br />

infill replacing the old rubber,<br />

additional storage for six-aside<br />

goals, and an additional<br />

pump to recycle water that<br />

drains from the field. The cork<br />

infill has been used instead<br />

of rubber to reduce the urban<br />

heat island effect and improve<br />

conditions for players on hot<br />

days. Fine mesh drains and<br />

foot brushes at all entry gates<br />

will collect debris, meaning<br />

it won’t end up in waterways.<br />

Mayor Michael Regan said:<br />

“Synthetic surfaces are more<br />

resilient to environmental<br />

factors and longer-lasting.<br />

Play or practice won’t need<br />

to be cancelled due to wet<br />

weather, returfing or weed<br />

control – that means more play<br />

time.” The field is leased by<br />

the Manly Warringah Football<br />

Association, with over 20,000<br />

members.<br />

School rewarded with<br />

sustainability grant<br />

Avalon’s Maria Regina Primary<br />

School has been granted $2000<br />

by Northern Beaches Council<br />

as part of Council’s <strong>2022</strong><br />

Eco Schools Grant Program.<br />

Council has committed<br />

$10,000 to the program to<br />

fund initiatives partly or<br />

fully in the fields of bush<br />

regeneration, carbon reduction,<br />

waste reduction, water reuse<br />

and reduction as well as<br />

sustainability education.<br />

Mayor Michael Regan said<br />

the program helped local<br />

schools involve more students<br />

in sustainability programs<br />

and put into practice some<br />

of their great ideas of how to<br />

implement them in their own<br />

schools.<br />

Vet<br />

on call<br />

with Dr Brown<br />

Vaccinating your cat helps<br />

to protect your precious<br />

pet from various debilitating<br />

diseases, some of which may<br />

not be immediately obvious<br />

as cats are adept at hiding<br />

signs of illness. As a result,<br />

sometimes they may be<br />

suffering for a long period of<br />

time before any symptoms<br />

become apparent.<br />

Now is the perfect time to<br />

book your cat in for a health<br />

check and vaccination at<br />

Sydney Animal Hospitals; this<br />

month we’re also offering<br />

free dental checks by our<br />

veterinary nurses, along<br />

with reduced-price dental<br />

procedures.<br />

Having a regular health<br />

check of your cat is vital to<br />

maintaining their health.<br />

Some of the things to keep an<br />

eye out for include changes<br />

to their appetite, water<br />

consumption or toileting<br />

behaviour. Or changes to<br />

their activity levels, grooming<br />

behaviour or body condition.<br />

When you book your cat in<br />

for their vaccinations, one of<br />

our team will perform a full<br />

physical examination of your<br />

pet and discuss with you any<br />

relevant history about how<br />

your cat is going. We’ll then<br />

be able to administer the<br />

appropriate vaccinations and<br />

discuss any recommended<br />

treatment options available.<br />

Kittens require vaccination<br />

against feline herpesvirus,<br />

feline calicivirus and feline<br />

panleukopenia at 6-8 weeks of<br />

age, 10-12 weeks of age and<br />

14-16 weeks of age. There are<br />

also additional vaccinations<br />

available against feline<br />

leukaemia (FeLV), chlamydia,<br />

rhinotracheitis and feline<br />

immunodeficiency virus (FIV).<br />

Cats require booster<br />

vaccinations to ensure<br />

long-term immunity against<br />

contagious diseases, and their<br />

first annual booster vaccination<br />

is due one year after their 14-16<br />

week vaccination, and then<br />

yearly thereafter.<br />

Offer valid through 30<br />

<strong>June</strong> (Ts&Cs apply). More<br />

info Avalon 9918 0833 or<br />

Newport 9997 4609.<br />

News<br />

32 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 33


long lunch when we heard Whitlam had<br />

been sacked and was about to make a<br />

speech on the steps,” he recalls. “I didn’t<br />

have a camera, so I was standing in the<br />

background between Bob Hawke and Bill<br />

Hayden when Norman Gunston (the hapless<br />

chat show host prone to daily shaving<br />

disasters played by comedian Gary Macdonald)<br />

turned up. Hawkie told him this<br />

was far too important to make fun of.”<br />

And the project Pieter is most proud of?<br />

“Working as director of photography<br />

with Scott Hicks (who later directed the<br />

Oscar-winning Shine) on the four-part<br />

documentary series The Great Wall of Iron<br />

with unprecedented access to the Chinese<br />

People’s Liberation Army.”<br />

It was a 14-week shoot for the BBC,<br />

NZBC and The Discovery Channel. “Some<br />

of the soldiers took us back to their<br />

remote villages to eat rice with their<br />

parents,” he said. “You’d never be allowed<br />

to do that now.”<br />

No sooner did Hicks’ team leave Beijing<br />

than another story involving the Chinese<br />

People’s Liberation Army began dominating<br />

the world’s TV screens. The Tiananmen<br />

Square massacre began on <strong>June</strong> 4,<br />

1989 when the same army’s tanks started<br />

rolling into the Chinese capital’s Beijing’s<br />

historic Imperial centre.<br />

Sadly, Pieter – something of a latterday<br />

vampire who prefers to shoot in the<br />

pre-dawn sunrise or the pre-dusk sunset<br />

– hasn’t brought his most-celebrated<br />

treasure to the cafe. This is a fragment<br />

(generally kept in cotton wool within an<br />

old-fashioned Kodak film canister) of<br />

the prow of the Titanic (where Leonardo<br />

DiCaprio as Jack declares himself “the<br />

King of the World” in James Cameron’s<br />

multi-Oscar-winning 1997 movie).<br />

Pieter didn’t work on Titanic. But he did<br />

work with “Jim” on the Cameron-directed<br />

3D IMAX documentary Titanic 3D: Ghosts<br />

of the Abyss, exploring the watery grave<br />

of “the unsinkable ship” and the 1,517 human<br />

souls who perished when it hit that<br />

iceberg in 1912.<br />

In 2001, Cameron, who surely has<br />

earned the right to be a cinematic perfectionist,<br />

had a massive budget for a<br />

documentary series of US$13 million. It<br />

grossed more than twice that at the box<br />

office. It allowed Cameron – an underwater<br />

explorer in his own right (in 2012 he<br />

descended in Deepsea Challenger in the<br />

world’s deepest solo depth ever experience<br />

by a human: 10,908 metres below<br />

sea level) – to hire the Russian research<br />

vessel Academik Mstislav Keleysh, complete<br />

with a mixed bag of 80 specialists.<br />

Scientists, sailors and film crew were<br />

all dependent on two Russian-built<br />

submersibles (Mir- 1 and Mir- 2) capable<br />

Continued on page 36<br />

Visionary<br />

<strong>Life</strong> Stories<br />

thinking<br />

Pieter de Vries has moved in high circles and<br />

descended deep oceans during his career as<br />

a photographer and cinematographer; now<br />

he’s focused on a local cause.<br />

<strong>Life</strong> Stories<br />

Story by Steve Meacham<br />

Award-winning photographer and<br />

cinematographer Pieter de Vries<br />

does a wicked impression of the<br />

next king of Great Britain (and presumably<br />

Australia).<br />

The Bilgola Plateau resident says he was<br />

just 21 when he and Prince Charles first<br />

met at Yarralumla, the Governor-General’s<br />

residence in Canberra.<br />

Pieter (his Dutch father arrived in Australia<br />

after World War II before meeting<br />

Pieter’s mother and settling in Lismore)<br />

had joined the ABC as an assistant cameraman<br />

and been assigned to cover the<br />

Queen’s royal tour of Australia in 1974.<br />

So he was obliged to go to the ‘meetand-greet’<br />

– at Government House. Except<br />

he couldn’t afford to buy a suit. Thinking<br />

he could blend into the background, the<br />

young Pieter borrowed an ill-fitting jacket<br />

from a senior cameraman and a mismatched<br />

pair of trousers from another.<br />

The story is much better when Pieter – a<br />

born raconteur and lauded elder of the<br />

Australian Cinematographers Society –<br />

tells it at 7.30am on a Sunday over coffee<br />

at his local cafe. Then it comes complete<br />

with vocal and physical impersonations<br />

of the young Prince of Wales (fiddling<br />

with his cufflinks), the uptight British<br />

equerry (with the plummy voice straight<br />

out of Eton) and the young Pieter cast in<br />

a jacket with sleeves so long his hands<br />

could barely grab a passing cocktail.<br />

All was going to plan, Pieter recalls,<br />

until the assorted press pack were addressed<br />

by the Prince of Wales’ hoigtytoigty<br />

master of protocol. “Form yourselves<br />

into groups of no more than five”,<br />

he instructed them. Preferably in a semicircle.<br />

Never ask HRH a question. Just<br />

answer his question, then let him move<br />

on to the next group. Most importantly,<br />

if he asks you a question, preface it with<br />

“Your Royal Highness”.<br />

Suddenly a tinkle of a bell introduced<br />

HRH arriving down the stairs… and making<br />

a beeline for the worst dressed guy in<br />

the room.<br />

Pieter’s words to royalty after being<br />

asked the first question of the night and<br />

told to address the heir to an ancient<br />

throne?<br />

“‘Yes, Your Royal Worship!’”<br />

And the heir’s reaction?<br />

“He laughed and moved on…”<br />

Pieter’s long and extraordinary career<br />

sounds so much like an Australian version<br />

of Forrest Gump you half expect Tom<br />

Hanks to arrive with a box of chocolates.<br />

He was there in August 1975 when<br />

the then Prime Minister Gough Whitlam<br />

poured sacrificial dirt into the hands of<br />

Vincent Lingiari, handing over the freehold<br />

title of the Gurindji lands.<br />

He was also there on the steps of Old<br />

Parliament House to watch Whitlam’s<br />

famous dismissal speech. “I was on a<br />

day off and eating a Steak Diane at a<br />

34 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

CLOCKWISE FROM OPPOSITE: A self portrait at Bilgola Beach; Parliament<br />

House, 1972; in Antarctica; there at ‘the dismissal’; shooting ‘The Great Wall<br />

of Iron’ in China; on the Titanic 3D ‘Ghosts’ shoot; at Cape Canaveral; the<br />

‘Rats of New York’; on tour with Gough Whitlam; <strong>Pittwater</strong> and Careel Bay;<br />

pouring sand into the hand of Vincent Lingiari at Wave Hill Station in the NT;<br />

with director James Cameron; with Whitlam before the historic NT visit.<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 35


<strong>Life</strong> Stories<br />

Continued from page 35<br />

of penetrating deep enough<br />

to “raise the Titanic” from the<br />

dead.<br />

“I was in Mir-1,” Pieter explains.<br />

“Jim’s younger brother<br />

Michael designed two remote<br />

devices small enough to slip<br />

through the Titanic’s portholes<br />

and explore inside so we<br />

could get footage that could be<br />

turned into 3D.”<br />

They were attached by<br />

an umbilical cord of optical<br />

fibres.<br />

“My most emotional shot?<br />

Seeing a bowler hat perfectly<br />

preserved still hanging on the<br />

back of the chair where it had<br />

been left in 1912.”<br />

Let’s pass over Rats, from<br />

the fertile mind of Mark Lewis,<br />

director of the legendary<br />

1988 Aussie documentary,<br />

Cane Toads. Set in the sewers<br />

and homes of New York,<br />

Pieter reveals the rats came<br />

from Chicago, and the sewer<br />

sequences were shot in a Los<br />

Angeles studio.<br />

Moving on, Pieter also<br />

does a mean impression of<br />

Sir David Attenborough. He’s<br />

never met “the greatest living<br />

Englishman” but has worked<br />

on one of Attenborough’s meticulously<br />

planned documentaries.<br />

Surely you remember<br />

the sequence when basking<br />

Carpet pythons were poised to<br />

pounce on thousands of bats<br />

which emerged from their tiny<br />

hole in the remote rockface<br />

of Queensland’s Mount Etna<br />

Caves National Park.<br />

Escaping the bat cave,<br />

hoping not to end up on the<br />

snakes’ tongues as a smorgasbord<br />

dinner?<br />

No?<br />

It occupied less than five<br />

minutes of incredible primeval<br />

confrontation.<br />

But to get the shots, Pieter<br />

had to lug his camera and<br />

tripod every day for two<br />

months up to the fissure, and<br />

wait until dusk when the bats<br />

played Russian roulette.<br />

Born and raised in Lismore,<br />

Pieter didn’t have a passport<br />

until the ABC assigned him<br />

to cover Gough Whitlam’s<br />

historic visit to Papua New<br />

Guinea on the way to meet the<br />

late Indonesian strongman/<br />

dictator Suharto in 1975.<br />

Now in his 70s, Pieter is as<br />

busy as ever.<br />

For much of his week, he<br />

takes one-on-one sessions<br />

at the ACS headquarters in<br />

North Sydney, explaining to<br />

talented stills photographers<br />

how to transfer to “new media<br />

formats”.<br />

(You’d be surprised at some<br />

of the award-winning press<br />

photographers from major<br />

media outlets who have been<br />

among his students.)<br />

He’s also literally overseas<br />

much of the time: a muchrequested<br />

best speaker –<br />

involving clips of his work and<br />

laugh-aloud anecdotes – on<br />

two of the world’s most elite<br />

cruise lines, Silversea and<br />

Regent Seven Seas.<br />

Yet most mornings – predawn<br />

– you’ll find him at<br />

Bilgola Plateau, camera on his<br />

belt before joining his wide<br />

circle of post-sunrise friends<br />

on Bilgola Beach after shooting<br />

a couple of photographs<br />

most of us would enlarge,<br />

hang on our walls and declare<br />

our own.<br />

Of an evening, you’ll find<br />

him at his favourite photographic<br />

locations between<br />

Palm Beach and Careel Bay as<br />

the sun sets in the west, providing<br />

him with the subdued<br />

light he loves.<br />

Pieter’s latest crusade is to<br />

add his talent to the salvation<br />

of Careel Bay’s unique ecology.<br />

He has volunteered to<br />

join the ground-breaking,<br />

year-long scientific survey of<br />

Careel Creek and Careel Bay to<br />

– hopefully – save an endangered<br />

part of <strong>Pittwater</strong>.<br />

As reported in <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

<strong>Life</strong> last month, it’s a citizen<br />

science project, backed by<br />

leading academics, and open<br />

to all: young or old.<br />

But you want to know a couple<br />

of tips from the cinematographer<br />

who was trapped in<br />

a Russian sub for eight hours<br />

at a time several filming the<br />

actual Titanic?<br />

“Pee before you submerge.<br />

It’s very embarrassing having<br />

to pee into a bottle in a threeman<br />

submersible.”<br />

Secondly? “I’m not a keen<br />

swimmer and I loathe the feeling<br />

of sand between my toes.<br />

But don’t let that stop your<br />

dreams.”<br />

* Training enquiries and<br />

details: pieterdevries.com.<br />

au; to volunteer for the Careel<br />

Bay project: livingocean.org.<br />

au or 0410 374 333.<br />

36 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


Hot Property<br />

Why ‘finished’ homes<br />

are highly prized<br />

‘The Priory’ at 56 Bynya Road<br />

Palm Beach.<br />

Hot Property<br />

LOCAL SCENE: 3 Ross Smith Pde Great Mackerel Beach (left) fetched a record $6.5m; 7 Beauty Drive Whale Beach.<br />

Although house prices<br />

have been softening<br />

since the start of the<br />

year, rising construction costs<br />

are now having an impact on all<br />

levels of the property market.<br />

“The medians in Sydney and<br />

Melbourne have pulled back<br />

a bit while elsewhere price<br />

growth is slowing,” reports Ray<br />

White Chief Economist Nerida<br />

Conisbee.<br />

“Add in the first of many expected<br />

interest rate rises after<br />

two years of the strongest level<br />

of price growth ever recorded,<br />

you would normally expect<br />

prices to continue to stabilise<br />

or fall for established homes<br />

for the remainder of the year.<br />

“However, this ignores the<br />

complexity of the housing<br />

market as well as how more<br />

expensive construction costs<br />

influence house prices.”<br />

Conisbee reports construction<br />

costs were up nine per<br />

cent – the highest rate recorded<br />

excluding the year the<br />

GST was introduced.<br />

She explained rising construction<br />

costs meant fewer<br />

homes being built – and this<br />

made a new home more expensive,<br />

meaning people will<br />

look to the existing market.<br />

Rising demand for existing<br />

homes from owner-occupiers is<br />

coming at a time when we are<br />

also having increased demand<br />

for rental accommodation.<br />

“With construction industry<br />

challenges, housing supply<br />

will be impacted, resulting in<br />

rising prices and rising rents,”<br />

she said.<br />

The demand for luxury properties<br />

on the Northern Beaches<br />

hasn’t faded, with strong sales<br />

results continuing to being<br />

achieved, particularly at the<br />

upper end of the market.<br />

When markets enter a new<br />

cycle typically there are less<br />

new listings due to sellers being<br />

more cautious, said Noel<br />

Nicholson from Ray White<br />

Prestige Palm Beach.<br />

“This has been evident<br />

across the upper Northern<br />

Beaches… Whale Beach is a<br />

prime example with only three<br />

listings in the suburb coming<br />

to market in <strong>2022</strong> to date,”<br />

Nicholson said.<br />

“The lack of stock in Palm<br />

and Whale Beach has continued<br />

the challenge for buyers to<br />

secure properties in the area.<br />

“It is primarily for this reason<br />

that highly desirable properties<br />

continue to be sought after,<br />

and strong sales continue to<br />

be achieved.”<br />

Properties currently listed<br />

for sale with Ray White Prestige<br />

Palm Beach include an<br />

expansive family home at 7<br />

Beauty Drive Whale Beach and<br />

the magnificent four-storey<br />

sandstone residence known as<br />

Holy Mackerel!<br />

David Edwards and BJ Edwards<br />

of LJ Hooker Palm Beach set<br />

a new suburb high for Great<br />

Mackerel Beach when they sold<br />

3 Ross Smith Parade for $6.5<br />

million last month.<br />

It wasn’t long before the<br />

busy father-and-son team<br />

added to their successful<br />

selling streak achieving a new<br />

price record for Whale Beach<br />

with the sale of the stunning<br />

oceanfront home at 17a Malo<br />

Road in line with their price<br />

guide of $14 million.<br />

Swell’s designs<br />

on the future<br />

Northern Beaches property<br />

owners, builders and architects<br />

can now tap into the<br />

latest building and design<br />

technology usually reserved<br />

for projects at ‘the big end of<br />

town’.<br />

Boasting a team who have<br />

worked on major public buildings<br />

including the Sydney<br />

Opera House and the National<br />

Gallery of Australia, Mona-<br />

Vale-based Southern Swell<br />

studio is now offering their<br />

collaborative technological and<br />

specialist design expertise to<br />

support small-to-medium local<br />

businesses involved in homes<br />

Continued on page 40<br />

38 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


Hot Property<br />

Private touch of paradise<br />

Avalon Beach<br />

51 Therry Street<br />

6 Bed / 3 Bath / 3 car<br />

Enjoy tranquil vistas and privacy from this flexible tri-level home,<br />

with outdoor spaces in which to relax and entertain.<br />

Its sun-dappled interiors offer seamless transition to a resortstyle<br />

rear yard, crowned by a top-floor parents retreat and a<br />

lower-level two-bedroom self-contained flat ideal for multigeneration<br />

living or potential income (STCA).<br />

Set in a peaceful cul-de-sac just moments to Careel Bay Marina,<br />

transport, schools, village shops, and Avalon Beach, its features<br />

include a stone-crafted kitchen with stainless steel appliances overlooking<br />

the heated pool; separate dining area with timber floors<br />

flowing directly to outdoor living; alfresco entertaining deck.<br />

* Contact the listing agents @ LJ Hooker Avalon Beach: Peter<br />

Robinson (0401 219 077) or Rebecca Hammond (0488 004 052).<br />

Dream waterfront rental<br />

Clareville<br />

244 Hudson Parade<br />

6 Bed / 4 Bath / 3 Car<br />

This private split-level waterfront rental is set on a protected<br />

sandy beach with boatshed and jetty. The home has classic interiors<br />

flowing to the entertaining spaces perfect for a permanent<br />

residence or holiday home for a six-month stay with easy-care<br />

gardens providing lush privacy.<br />

The home enjoys direct access to Refuge Bay and features openplan<br />

living and kitchen areas; undercover entertaining spaces with<br />

beautiful views; galley kitchen; generous master suite with walk-in<br />

robe, ensuite and <strong>Pittwater</strong> views; spacious lounge/dining area<br />

with raked ceilings and timber flooring; double carport.<br />

For lease – $1795 per week.<br />

* Contact the leasing agents @ LJ Hooker Avalon Beach:<br />

Sian Uther (0439 844 743) or Lauren Fisher (0499 154 655).<br />

Continued from page 42<br />

and construction.<br />

Co-founders Anu George<br />

and Chris Lock have worked together<br />

for a decade in building<br />

services, utilising technology<br />

and creating 3D virtual models<br />

to take the guesswork out of<br />

interpreting plans or sketches<br />

and helping ensure everyone<br />

involved in the construction,<br />

renovation or design process<br />

was on the same page.<br />

Anu explained Building Information<br />

Modelling (BIM) provided<br />

accurate representation of a<br />

building or space, reducing the<br />

risks associated with construction<br />

and design.<br />

“Often people struggle to<br />

interpret 2D plans and when<br />

it’s built it’s not at all what they<br />

thought it would look like,” she<br />

said.<br />

“Using BIM technologies, we<br />

can create virtual models so you<br />

can almost imagine like you are<br />

standing in that space and you<br />

can visualise better.<br />

“We are now collaborating<br />

with smaller local operators to<br />

provide them with the opportunity<br />

to utilise these cutting-edge<br />

tools and our other specialised<br />

services in their business.”<br />

Anu’s background is in<br />

specialist lighting design and<br />

sustainability, consulting on the<br />

optimal use of artificial light and<br />

also how to make the best use<br />

of natural light.<br />

With the ability to affect<br />

mood, the shape and size of a<br />

room and its functionality, lighting<br />

can make or break a design;<br />

however it is often one of the<br />

elements that are overlooked<br />

when constructing or creating<br />

a space.<br />

More info southernswell.com.au<br />

ACCURATE PLAN: Residential and<br />

commerical 3D modelling<br />

40 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991


Art <strong>Life</strong><br />

Art <strong>Life</strong><br />

Gemma prizes her<br />

Wynne achievement<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> artist Gemma Rasdall fulfilled<br />

a five-year career dream last month<br />

when she was selected as a finalist in<br />

the <strong>2022</strong> Wynne Prize, with her entry hanging<br />

in the Art Gallery of NSW until August.<br />

The prestigious Wynne Prize, staged<br />

concurrently with the Archibald and Sulman<br />

Prizes, has been awarded annually<br />

since 1897 for the best landscape painting<br />

of Australian scenery.<br />

Gemma’s series of watercolour panel<br />

paintings of views from homes on Scotland<br />

Island, where she is based, was<br />

among 34 artworks chosen from more<br />

than 600 entries.<br />

Gemma painted her series<br />

of 24 small works – ‘Framed<br />

by life offshore’ (top) – while<br />

staring at the hand-drawn<br />

‘inspiration board’ message<br />

she had pinned to her studio<br />

wall (pictured).<br />

The process marked a reset<br />

in her artist’s journey.<br />

“I’d mainly been painting<br />

acrylic paintings, mixed<br />

media paintings of seascapes<br />

for the past 10 years. Towards<br />

the end of last year, I was<br />

struggling with overworking<br />

my paintings a lot,” she said.<br />

“I started doing watercolour works on paper;<br />

they’re tiny. I was trying to be deliberate about<br />

every brushstroke I made because you see every<br />

brushstroke. But they’re fast, so if you mess it up,<br />

it doesn’t matter.<br />

“I did heaps of these and I was really enjoying<br />

the process… I wanted to tell a story about the<br />

island and I thought this was a good way of doing<br />

it.”<br />

Gemma asked her neighbours if she could visit<br />

their houses and do sketches on their balconies.<br />

“I did this with my friends from the island, from<br />

all angles of the<br />

island.”<br />

Each panel<br />

faces a different<br />

aspect and is<br />

captioned underneath.<br />

“I’ve entered<br />

the Wynne Prize<br />

three times,”<br />

Gemma said.<br />

“I have this big<br />

sign on my wall<br />

for the last five<br />

years, ‘Get hung<br />

in the Wynne Prize’… being selected as<br />

a finalist was so unexpected, but such<br />

an amazing feeling.”<br />

The artist’s statement for Gemma’s<br />

entry reads: “Welcome to Scotland<br />

Island: a short boat ride, casual paddle<br />

or vigorous swim from Church Point<br />

Wharf on Garigal Country, NSW. We<br />

offshore dwellers blow in and out<br />

with the tides, basking like seals when<br />

the sun shines and washing up like<br />

drowning rats when the squalls hit.<br />

This place and its people – a quirky<br />

and multifarious community – warm<br />

my soul and flood my creative practice<br />

with colour and movement. This artwork is a<br />

collection of moments captured around the island<br />

and its surrounding bays from friends’ and neighbours’<br />

houses. It is an ode to the place I call home.”<br />

Gemma’s artworks have featured on the cover of<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong>, including last month.<br />

On May 13, the Wynne Prize was awarded to<br />

Nicholas Harding for his Cabbage Palm-focussed<br />

painting ‘Eora’.<br />

Meanwhile Gemma’s current exhibition ‘Water<br />

access only’ continues at the Bather’s Pavilion,<br />

Mosman, until <strong>June</strong> 20.<br />

– Nigel Wall<br />

* More info artgallery.nsw.gov.au<br />

Studio<br />

show ‘For<br />

the Love of<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong>’<br />

or the Love of<br />

‘F<strong>Pittwater</strong>’ – a<br />

collection of local<br />

marine life and oceaninspired<br />

artworks by Jo<br />

Bell – is the <strong>June</strong> feature<br />

exhibition at The Studio<br />

at Careel Bay Marina.<br />

Jo, a passionate<br />

volunteer member of<br />

the Organisation for the<br />

Rescue and Research of<br />

Cetaceans in Australia<br />

(ORRCA), uses her<br />

platform to raise<br />

awareness, educate<br />

and inspire others to<br />

protect the ocean and<br />

its inhabitants.<br />

She describes her<br />

collection as a “love<br />

letter to the local area”,<br />

with the artworks<br />

inspired by <strong>Pittwater</strong><br />

available for viewing<br />

and purchase in<br />

support of ORRCA.<br />

(Ten per cent of sale<br />

proceeds will be<br />

donated to ORRCA.)<br />

‘For the Love of<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong>’ will be<br />

launched at The Studio<br />

by Laing+Simmons<br />

Young Property on 2<br />

<strong>June</strong> and is open 8am<br />

to 4pm, Monday to<br />

Saturday, and Sundays<br />

from 8am to 12pm.<br />

* View a collection<br />

of Jo’s originals<br />

and prints at<br />

oceanloveart.com<br />

Colours abound<br />

in Spectrum show<br />

F<br />

ollowing the success of their recent Autumn Art Exhibition, the<br />

Northern Beaches Art Society will present their 76th Annual<br />

Awards Art Exhibition and Sale at the Newport Community Centre<br />

from Friday 17 to Sunday 19 <strong>June</strong>.<br />

Northern Beaches Mayor Michael Regan will open the exhibition,<br />

‘Spectrum’, and present all the awards on opening night.<br />

“Our enthusiastic members, who are all local artists, will be vying<br />

for three major awards and all the paintings will be for sale,” said<br />

NBAS President Heather Macorison.<br />

“A number of our new members, who joined after visiting the<br />

previous exhibition, will have works on display at this exhibition<br />

and visitors will be able to see a vast array of works in a variety of<br />

mediums and styles in oils, watercolours, acrylics, and pastels as<br />

well as drawings covering a plethora of subjects.”<br />

Also, visitors will be able to purchase raffle tickets to win a beautiful<br />

watercolour painting by Lyndall Clegg (all proceeds will go to<br />

the Ukraine Crisis Appeal, with the winner drawn at the end of the<br />

exhibition).<br />

Visitors will also be able to vote for their favourite painting in the<br />

‘People’s Choice’ prize, with the artist who gains the most votes for<br />

their painting awarded a prize.<br />

‘Spectrum’ will be open from 2pm on Friday 17 <strong>June</strong> and on Saturday<br />

from 9am to 5pm and Sunday from 9am to 4pm. The Official<br />

Opening will be from 6pm to 8pm on Friday 17 <strong>June</strong>, when drinks<br />

will be served.<br />

Purchasers of exhibition paintings can collect their artworks<br />

after 4pm on Sunday 19 <strong>June</strong>.<br />

* More info northernbeachesartsociety.org<br />

Art <strong>Life</strong><br />

46 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 47


Surfing <strong>Life</strong><br />

with Nick Carroll<br />

Print wipeout: are surfing<br />

magazines a dying trend?<br />

2005 2013<br />

Surfing <strong>Life</strong><br />

1964 1975-76 1984 1992<br />

No doubt you’ve heard it<br />

before. “Print is dead.”<br />

This reductive sorta<br />

judgment has been bandied<br />

about in media circles, in<br />

surfing as much as anywhere,<br />

for over a decade now.<br />

But in late January (2017),<br />

when SURFING magazine<br />

actually closed its doors,<br />

surfers worldwide got a bit of<br />

a shock.<br />

The California-based<br />

SURFING had been in<br />

continuous publication since<br />

1964. As one of the two<br />

biggest surf mags in the world<br />

for much of the past 53 years<br />

(the other one being close rival<br />

SURFER), it defined the modern<br />

trend toward high-energy<br />

high-performance surfing for<br />

generations of readers.<br />

At its peak in 1989, it sold<br />

over 120,000 copies a month,<br />

employed 38 people fulltime<br />

and a couple of dozen<br />

part-time, and booked up to<br />

half a million dollars’ worth of<br />

advertising per issue, much of<br />

it from the surging young lions<br />

of the new surf industry of the<br />

day: Gotcha, Quiksilver, Body<br />

Glove and many more.<br />

A social and economic<br />

powerhouse, in fact! Yet the<br />

rise and decline of SURFING<br />

magazine tells a bigger story,<br />

about how its subject and<br />

readership has swung with<br />

social change.<br />

When it began publishing as<br />

‘International Surfing’ in the<br />

early 1960s, modern surfing<br />

was still in its birth throes. The<br />

Baby Boomers were still almost<br />

just that, babies: a third of the<br />

US West Coast’s population<br />

was under 21 years of age.<br />

The lightweight foam and<br />

fibreglass Malibu surfboard<br />

was on sale everywhere to<br />

these kids, with their new-car<br />

mobility and desire to explore<br />

the world.<br />

Like those kids, SURFING<br />

took a while to figure out who<br />

it really was. In 1967 it briefly<br />

left SURFER in the dust, rolling<br />

with psychedelia and the<br />

shortboard revolution, before<br />

settling into a bi-monthly<br />

groove – a sort of stoned<br />

stability that matched its<br />

10,000-odd readers.<br />

That lasted until 1975,<br />

when the tendrils of the new<br />

pro surfing movement began<br />

to snake their ways into<br />

California’s surf consciousness.<br />

SURFER, the self-proclaimed<br />

“bible of the sport”, turned its<br />

nose up at this tomfoolery,<br />

but SURFING’s young editor,<br />

Dave Gilovich, saw a chance<br />

to do what all good editors<br />

do – separate your mag from<br />

the competition. SURFER might<br />

be the bible, but SURFING’s<br />

tagline read, “The Hot One!”<br />

In 1978 the mag was bought<br />

by Australian emigre Clyde<br />

Packer. Clyde signed off on a<br />

monthly publication schedule<br />

and gave his young staff its<br />

head. They dragged in brilliant<br />

LA designer Mike Salisbury<br />

and turned SURFING into a<br />

bright, brash showcase for<br />

the surf stars of the 1980s.<br />

And everything lit up. The<br />

magazine kept finding new<br />

48 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

readers – the “echo boomer”<br />

generation, who wanted to<br />

reject everything their boring<br />

1960s parents had stood for.<br />

In that late ’80s boom time, its<br />

average reader age got down<br />

to just under 17. SURFER’s<br />

publisher tried to disparage it<br />

with the nickname “Teen Beat”<br />

– but that was just what the<br />

advertisers wanted to hear.<br />

The recession of 1991<br />

hit that whole construct –<br />

advertisers and readers – hard.<br />

But magazine sales stayed<br />

bravely above 70,000, and<br />

rebounded with the emergence<br />

of sensational Kelly Slater<br />

and his generation of young<br />

wizards. SURFING spent the<br />

1990s perfecting the role of<br />

conduit between Kelly and crew<br />

and their expanding fan-base –<br />

still youthful, yet less brash and<br />

more given to opening up new<br />

areas of surf, like Indonesia’s<br />

Mentawais chain and Tahiti’s<br />

Teahupoo.<br />

1999’s dot-com bubble had<br />

everyone predicting the End of<br />

Print. But the dot-com bubble<br />

came and went with little effect<br />

on magazines – specially not<br />

on the sharp niche press like<br />

SURFING. What did change was<br />

the ownership. A terminally ill<br />

Clyde Packer sold the title and<br />

its associated publications to a<br />

big New York publishing house<br />

for just over $20 million.<br />

In one way this sealed<br />

SURFING’s fate. Magazines –<br />

all media really – exist in the<br />

tension between ownership<br />

and readership; once you’re<br />

a niche publication in a big<br />

corporate structure, things<br />

are bound to go south. A few<br />

years and acquisitions later,<br />

SURFING, SURFER and a third<br />

younger rival, Transworld<br />

Surf, were all under the same<br />

corporate roof, forced to share<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

offices and even ad sales<br />

staff, trying desperately to<br />

chase readerships that were<br />

diffusing just as the mags<br />

themselves were congealing.<br />

Then came smartphones<br />

and social media, and<br />

that pretty much killed off<br />

SURFING’s raison d’etre – its<br />

role as conduit. What kid in<br />

a shrinking kids’ surf market<br />

needed “The Hot One” to<br />

check John John Florence’s<br />

latest clip? What surf star<br />

needed a mag when he or<br />

she had Instagram? The<br />

publication went back to<br />

eight per year, and sales had<br />

declined to something close to<br />

its 1975 average of 10,000.<br />

In the end – a very 2017<br />

end – SURFING was killed via<br />

corporate rationalising. It was<br />

it or SURFER, and “the bible”<br />

sounded better. One of the<br />

staff was game enough to<br />

offer just over $3 million for<br />

the title, but the corporates<br />

knocked it back, clearly<br />

thinking it was worth that just<br />

to prevent competition.<br />

In SURFING magazine’s 53<br />

years, Australia and the US<br />

saw 256 separate surfing titles<br />

come and go. Only a handful<br />

still exist, mostly surviving on<br />

niches within the niche: mostly<br />

older or more artisanally<br />

minded readers, who like the<br />

physical feel of a publication<br />

and who have the money to<br />

pay for it. Print’s not quite<br />

dead, but like surfing, it’s<br />

definitely middle-aged.<br />

(*I should reveal I wrote for<br />

SURFING it its glory years and<br />

was editor-in-chief of Clyde<br />

Packer’s Californian magazine<br />

stable from 1991 to 1997.)<br />

* Nick Carroll is on leave;<br />

this column first appeared in<br />

our March 2017 issue.<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 49<br />

Surfing <strong>Life</strong>


Health & Wellbeing<br />

Health Special Feature<br />

Be migraine aware: it’s<br />

more than a headache<br />

It has been estimated 4.9 million Australians – one in five – are living<br />

with migraine. To mark International Migraine Awareness month, we’ve<br />

brought together information from the Brain Foundation and patient<br />

advocacy group Migraine Australia to help you understand more about<br />

this common and often debilitating disorder. By Lisa Offord<br />

What is migraine<br />

Migraine is a neurological disorder<br />

that is characterised by an<br />

intense one-sided throbbing or<br />

pulsating headache, which lasts<br />

between 4 and 72 hours with<br />

some warning symptoms (aura)<br />

before, and a ‘migraine hangover’<br />

(Postdrome) afterward.<br />

Migraine can be aggravated<br />

by physical activity and is very<br />

often associated with nausea<br />

and vomiting, as well as<br />

increased sensitivity to light,<br />

sound and even some types of<br />

smell.<br />

According to Migraine Australia,<br />

many people who live<br />

with migraine may not have a<br />

headache at all, and never know<br />

they have migraine. For others,<br />

migraine attacks are frequent<br />

and can be debilitating.<br />

Causes<br />

The exact cause of migraine<br />

remains a mystery; however recent<br />

research suggests strong<br />

genetic links.<br />

People with migraine often<br />

report that environmental<br />

factors such as diet, or the<br />

weather provoke or aggravate<br />

symptoms.<br />

The most reported food triggers<br />

are chocolate, cheese, coffee<br />

or other caffeinated drinks,<br />

nuts, citrus fruits, processed<br />

meats, additives, fatty or salty<br />

foods, and alcoholic drinks.<br />

Other triggers include bright<br />

or flickering light, motion,<br />

loud sounds, strong odours,<br />

changes in weather, fatigue or<br />

lack of sleep, stress, hormones,<br />

skipping meals and some<br />

medications.<br />

How to manage<br />

migraine<br />

Migraine cannot be cured but it<br />

can be managed by a combination<br />

of lifestyle changes,<br />

About aura<br />

A third of migraine patients<br />

experience ‘aura’ which is a<br />

range of neurological symptoms<br />

such as seeing lines, zigzag<br />

patterns, or a colourless<br />

‘hole’ in the vision, numbness<br />

and weakness, or dizziness,<br />

prior to the headache. Some<br />

people only have the aura<br />

symptoms and do not get<br />

headache.<br />

medications and tools that are<br />

right for you. Here are Migraine<br />

Australia’s top lifestyle tips.<br />

Establish a routine. At a minimum<br />

get up at the same time,<br />

eat at the same time and go to<br />

bed at the same time every day<br />

of the week. Getting a good<br />

night’s sleep is particularly<br />

important.<br />

Spread out your meals. Consider<br />

changing the way you eat<br />

to five or six small meals a day<br />

rather than three big ones. This<br />

will help keep your blood sugar<br />

consistent and may help reduce<br />

your attacks.<br />

Do an elimination diet. This<br />

is best done with a dietitian to<br />

help find any food triggers so<br />

you can avoid them.<br />

Keep a diary. Keep a diagnostic<br />

migraine diary for three months<br />

to help identify other triggers,<br />

such as stress or changes in<br />

the weather. For women, pay<br />

particular attention to your<br />

menstrual cycle: a migraine<br />

attack around ovulation and a<br />

day or two before your period<br />

is common.<br />

Stay active. Thirty minutes of<br />

light exercise, such as a walk<br />

or yoga, daily can be very<br />

beneficial however, high impact<br />

exercise can make migraine<br />

worse.<br />

Medications<br />

Acute treatments refer to<br />

medications used to treat a<br />

migraine attack at the onset<br />

of symptoms. These include<br />

simple pain relief medications<br />

you can buy over the counter<br />

in pharmacies or supermarkets<br />

or medications that can alter<br />

pressure on blood vessels, and<br />

anti-nausea medications.<br />

If you are experiencing more<br />

than three migraine attacks<br />

a month, Migraine Australia<br />

recommends you talk to your<br />

Simple tools to help manage<br />

migraine attacks and reduce<br />

symptoms include:<br />

n Having a sleep<br />

n Putting an ice pack on the<br />

back of the neck or head<br />

n Lying down in a dark, quiet,<br />

and cool room<br />

n Drinking a cold cola or strong<br />

coffee<br />

n Drinking a sports drink or<br />

eating salty food if craving salt<br />

n Taking a hot shower or using<br />

heat packs<br />

doctor about trying preventive<br />

medications, taken at regular<br />

intervals to reduce the incidence<br />

of attacks.<br />

Complementary<br />

therapies<br />

The Brain Foundation says the<br />

following therapies may also be<br />

used to further reduce migraine<br />

attacks.<br />

n Acupuncture: Stimulating<br />

acupoints may ease pain by<br />

encouraging production of endorphins<br />

(natural painkillers).<br />

n Alexander Technique: Can<br />

help prevent headaches by<br />

relieving poor posture and<br />

pressure that results from it.<br />

n Biofeedback: Patients learn<br />

to control blood pressure, heart<br />

rate, and spasms in the arteries<br />

supplying the brain through a<br />

sensory device.<br />

n Hypnotherapy: May help a<br />

patient cope with headache by<br />

altering the way the body interprets<br />

messages of pain.<br />

n Massage: Can reduce muscle<br />

tension throughout the body,<br />

thereby reducing headache.<br />

n Meditation: To relieve stress<br />

which is a major trigger for<br />

some migraine patients.<br />

Where to get help<br />

For most people, migraine can<br />

be managed effectively with the<br />

help of a GP without the need<br />

for specialists or tests.<br />

However, Migraine Australia<br />

recommends asking for a referral<br />

to a neurologist to confirm<br />

the diagnosis and says getting<br />

an MRI is a good idea if you<br />

have complex symptoms.<br />

Physiotherapy can be helpful<br />

and as migraine is commonly<br />

linked with anxiety and depression,<br />

having a psychologist<br />

as part of your care team is<br />

strongly recommended. Also,<br />

many people benefit from joining<br />

a support group.<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

50 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 51


Health & Wellbeing<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

Seeing is believing: freedom<br />

of multifocal contact lenses<br />

As you get older, you’ve<br />

probably noticed that<br />

close-up objects are<br />

starting to appear blurry.<br />

This is a sign of presbyopia,<br />

a frustrating yet natural<br />

condition that begins to<br />

affect most people as they<br />

enter their 40s. It impacts<br />

many aspects of quality of<br />

life, including difficulty with<br />

near vision tasks such as<br />

reading printed text, or using<br />

a smartphone. It is estimated<br />

that nearly two billion people<br />

struggle with presbyopia<br />

globally – but luckily new<br />

multifocal contact lenses can<br />

help win back the clear vision<br />

you used to enjoy.<br />

The advances in multi-focal<br />

contact lens technology in<br />

Australia over the past few<br />

years have made contact<br />

lenses more accessible to<br />

everyone. In fact, if you wear<br />

glasses, chances are you<br />

can wear contact lenses too!<br />

There are a wide range of<br />

lenses available, providing<br />

the flexibility to meet almost<br />

every visual and lifestyle<br />

need.<br />

Contact lenses are made<br />

from comfortable, breathable<br />

materials, ensuring your<br />

eyes remain fresh and<br />

lubricated all day, providing<br />

the freedom to exercise and<br />

play sports whilst seeing<br />

clearly. Multifocal contacts<br />

enable clear judgment of<br />

depth perception as well<br />

as clarity of reading; for<br />

example the computer on a<br />

bike, or equipment set-up at<br />

the gym… or even the menu<br />

in a coffee shop after your<br />

morning yoga class. Forget<br />

pulling out glasses to read<br />

labels and price tags when<br />

shopping and imagine reading<br />

a menu in low light… without<br />

specs. Your presbyopia<br />

doesn’t have to hold you back!<br />

In addition to meeting your<br />

visual demands, there are<br />

many choices when it comes<br />

to the type of contact lenses<br />

you can select. The best<br />

solution for you will depend<br />

on how often you plan to<br />

wear them, whether you’d<br />

like to be able to sleep in<br />

them, and your budget. Daily<br />

disposable contact lenses are<br />

simply thrown out at night<br />

before bed and replaced in<br />

the morning with a fresh<br />

new pair; extended-wear<br />

with Rowena Beckenham<br />

contact lenses are lenses you<br />

can sleep in (they’re great for<br />

a busy lifestyle and seeing<br />

clearly at any time, including<br />

first thing in the morning);<br />

while daily care contact lenses<br />

can be used for 14 to 30 days<br />

and are removed and cleaned<br />

nightly for re-use the next<br />

morning.<br />

Not only can contact lenses<br />

cater to your every need, they<br />

are also relatively financially<br />

viable, costing as little as $2<br />

a day, which is probably less<br />

than half the cost of your daily<br />

cup of coffee!<br />

Be empowered to enjoy the<br />

freedom of contact lenses,<br />

even as your eyes change<br />

– so you’re always ready<br />

to take on every day with<br />

confidence. Book a contact<br />

lens appointment today!<br />

Comment supplied by<br />

Rowena Beckenham, of<br />

Beckenham Optometrist<br />

in Avalon (9918 0616).<br />

Rowena has been<br />

involved in all facets<br />

of independent private<br />

practice optometry in<br />

Avalon for 20 years,<br />

in addition to working<br />

as a consultant to the<br />

optometric and<br />

pharmaceutical industry,<br />

and regularly volunteering<br />

in Aboriginal eyecare<br />

programs in regional NSW.<br />

Mosquito alert updated<br />

Mosquitoes carrying<br />

dangerous viruses<br />

harmful to humans continue<br />

to be detected on the<br />

Northern Beaches with<br />

authorities updating a health<br />

alert advising people to<br />

protect themselves against<br />

being bitten.<br />

Council partners with NSW<br />

Health to trap mosquitoes<br />

at key locations to monitor<br />

the numbers and types of<br />

mosquitoes present and<br />

determine if they are carrying<br />

viral infections.<br />

In late May, Ross River Virus<br />

and Barmah Forest Virus<br />

were detected in mosquitoes<br />

trapped at Narrabeen Lagoon.<br />

Ross River virus can cause<br />

flu-like symptoms in some<br />

people, including fever, chills,<br />

headache, fatigue and aches<br />

and pains in the muscles and<br />

joints. Joints can become<br />

swollen and stiff and a body<br />

rash can occur. Symptoms<br />

usually develop about 7-10<br />

days after being bitten by an<br />

infected mosquito.<br />

You can protect yourself<br />

and your family by taking the<br />

following steps:<br />

n Always wear long, loosefitting<br />

clothing to minimise<br />

skin exposure;<br />

n Apply a repellent that<br />

contains either Diethyl<br />

Toluamide (DEET), Picaridin or<br />

oil of lemon eucalyptus (OLE);<br />

n Be aware of peak mosquito<br />

times at dawn and dusk; and<br />

n Keep your yard free of<br />

standing water in things like<br />

pot plant trays where the<br />

mosquitoes can breed.<br />

Higher than average rainfall<br />

due to La Niña has created<br />

the perfect conditions for<br />

mosquitoes to multiply and<br />

numbers are up on previous<br />

years.<br />

NSW Health has advised<br />

Council to continue trapping<br />

mosquitoes at Warriewood<br />

Wetlands and Deep Creek,<br />

near the Narrabeen Lagoon<br />

Trail, past the usual trapping<br />

season based on the high<br />

number of mosquitoes and<br />

the detection of viruses. – LO<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

52 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 53


Health & Wellbeing<br />

with Matilda Brown<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

6 daily health reminders for<br />

surviving the modern world<br />

Up until the age of 13 I<br />

was a bean pole – not<br />

an ounce of fat on me.<br />

When puberty hit, I developed<br />

boobs and hips and was<br />

suddenly labelled “fuller<br />

figured”. Luckily for girls now,<br />

a fuller figure is celebrated,<br />

and fat shaming is a thing of<br />

the past. Phew.<br />

But not when I was a teen.<br />

Chubby little 13-year-old-me<br />

quickly learnt to hate herself<br />

and for the next five years<br />

explored fad diet after fad<br />

diet, each time getting further<br />

Here’s a go-to, quick-and-easy recipe to warm<br />

the bones and nourish the soul:<br />

Bangers, Mash &<br />

Onion Gravy<br />

(Serves 4)<br />

8-12 sausages (gf)<br />

3 tbs olive oil<br />

2 large brown onions<br />

75ml balsamic vinegar<br />

500ml beef broth<br />

250ml red wine<br />

1 tsp dijon mustard<br />

3 sprig thyme<br />

1 sprig rosemary<br />

2 tbs besan flour (optional)<br />

pinch salt<br />

1 large sweet potato – chopped<br />

4 white potatoes – chopped<br />

4 tbs butter<br />

splash of milk (optional)<br />

Method<br />

1. Remove sausages from the fridge 30 minutes<br />

before cooking.<br />

2. Add sliced onions to a saucepan with 2 tbs<br />

olive oil. Sauté for 5-6 minutes on medium,<br />

add balsamic vinegar and continue to cook<br />

for 3-4 mins. Reduce heat to low and place<br />

the lid on for 20 minutes. Then cook for<br />

further 10 mins.<br />

3. Meanwhile bring the broth to a boil and<br />

continue to cook until it reduces by 50%; add<br />

wine, mustard and herbs and continue to<br />

reduce. Add the besan flour to thicken the<br />

gravy; gently whisk. Allow to simmer on low<br />

while sausages cook.<br />

away from that “ideal” body.<br />

Consequently, I had eating<br />

disorders well into my mid-<br />

20s, body dysmorphia and a<br />

plethora of different versions<br />

on what I should and should<br />

not be putting into my body.<br />

Add to that the pressures<br />

of being an actress, and you<br />

can imagine that being inside<br />

my head was at times a little<br />

unpleasant.<br />

I know many can relate<br />

to this story. We live in<br />

a superficial world with<br />

information being thrown<br />

at us from all directions.<br />

Enter Instagram, Influences,<br />

filters and fillers and the<br />

standard seems even more<br />

impossible to reach, the<br />

plight of obtaining self-love,<br />

exhausting.<br />

As luck would have it, I met<br />

and married the one person<br />

who would both feed me<br />

delicious food and teach me<br />

about nutrition – my husband<br />

Scott. Relearning has been a<br />

gradual process, but I now see<br />

my body and health through a<br />

much more philosophical lens,<br />

A little something to nourish the soul<br />

4. In a saucepan, add the chopped potatoes to<br />

some salted water and bring to the boil; cook<br />

on a rapid simmer until cooked through.<br />

5. Heat 1 tbs olive oil in a large frypan and add<br />

the sausages on med-high heat. Turn often<br />

to ensure until cooked through. Set aside.<br />

6. Once the potatoes are cooked, remove from<br />

heat, drain and add butter (and milk if you<br />

like). Mash with fork or masher. Season.<br />

7. Add the onions to the gravy and stir.<br />

8. Serve the sausages with the mash and onion<br />

gravy.<br />

guided primarily by my six<br />

daily health reminders:<br />

My body isn’t someone<br />

1. else’s to comment on nor<br />

is it a commodity for society<br />

to make money off.<br />

My body is my home<br />

2. and it houses my past,<br />

present and future. It’s the<br />

only home that I’ll never move<br />

out of, which means I need<br />

to take really good care of<br />

it – not just physically, but<br />

mentally and spiritually.<br />

Decide what to put into<br />

3. your body based on<br />

nutritional, energetic, and<br />

spiritual value. When your<br />

thoughts and beliefs get old,<br />

or no longer serve you, just<br />

like furniture or clothes – give<br />

them a good scrub or put<br />

them on the curb for council<br />

clean-up.<br />

Try not to punish<br />

4. yourself. “Punishment”<br />

creates perpetual negative<br />

self-talk loop and a toxic<br />

relationship with food.<br />

Instead, treat yourself with<br />

high-quality, nutrient-dense<br />

cooking and create a positive<br />

relationship with food.<br />

Don’t subscribe to diets<br />

5. that promise to achieve<br />

your target in two weeks. See<br />

health as a life-time goal, not<br />

a short-term goal. It takes<br />

time for the body to break<br />

old habits and find its new<br />

rhythm.<br />

Know where your food<br />

6. comes from and eat<br />

unprocessed as much as<br />

possible.<br />

Matilda Brown is<br />

an actress, writer and<br />

business owner. Her<br />

husband Scott Gooding<br />

is a holistic performance<br />

& nutrition coach, sports<br />

nutritionist and chef.<br />

Together they founded and<br />

run The Good Farm Shop.<br />

www.thegoodfarm.shop<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

54 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 55


Health & Wellbeing<br />

with Andrew Snow<br />

Hair & Beauty<br />

with Sue Carroll<br />

Address sleep environment<br />

& habits to combat insomnia<br />

Reduce the visible signs of<br />

aging with a collagen boost<br />

Health & Wellbeing<br />

Sleep is an important element<br />

in maintaining good<br />

health and wellbeing. Poor<br />

sleep patterns and poor sleep<br />

quality have been linked to<br />

general fatigue, poor concentration,<br />

and other symptoms<br />

which can interfere with everyday<br />

activities and negatively<br />

impact quality of life.<br />

Sleeping patterns will change<br />

as we age, with the amount<br />

of sleep required each night<br />

changing over time. Most adults<br />

need 7-9 hours of sleep each<br />

night, whereas teenagers need<br />

8-10 hours, and infants need<br />

around 12-15 hours of sleep<br />

each day. Your sleep-wake cycle<br />

follows a circadian rhythm,<br />

cycling roughly every 24 hours<br />

which determines when we<br />

enter our period of sleep and<br />

when we enter our period of<br />

wakefulness. The balanced<br />

relationship between melatonin<br />

– the sleep hormone – and<br />

cortisol – the stress hormone –<br />

helps to regulate this cycle.<br />

Having good sleeping habits<br />

comes with a range of benefits.<br />

Sleep can help improve mood<br />

and concentration, improving<br />

productivity throughout<br />

the day. Getting an adequate<br />

amount of sleep has also been<br />

shown to reduce base levels of<br />

cortisol. Lower levels of cortisol<br />

reduce the risk of heart disease<br />

and diabetes, along with facilitating<br />

better weight management<br />

and mood control.<br />

Sleep deprivation, on the<br />

other hand, has been shown<br />

to increase cortisol levels –<br />

likely an attempt to stimulate<br />

alertness. This disturbs the<br />

balanced sleep-wake cycle<br />

and can lead to common sleep<br />

problems such as insomnia.<br />

Insomnia presents as difficulty<br />

falling asleep, difficulty<br />

staying asleep, or poor sleep<br />

quality. Several different elements<br />

can contribute to the<br />

development of insomnia,<br />

including:<br />

n A poor sleep environment;<br />

n Eating too late in the evening;<br />

n Stimulating the brain before<br />

bed;<br />

n Stress around not sleeping,<br />

or strong feelings such<br />

as anger, anxiety, fear, or<br />

sadness;<br />

n Caffeine or excessive alcohol<br />

in the evening;<br />

n Smoking, or using nicotine<br />

replacement therapy, soon<br />

before bed;<br />

n Certain medical conditions or<br />

medications;<br />

n Having multiple naps during<br />

the day;<br />

n Needing to pass often during<br />

the night, causing interrupted<br />

sleep;<br />

n Unmanaged pain or<br />

discomfort;<br />

Creating an optimal sleep<br />

environment is key to facilitating<br />

sleep. The bedroom should<br />

be a dark, quiet space with a<br />

comfortable bed, with good<br />

temperature control and air<br />

flow. Activities such as work,<br />

exercise, or watching television<br />

should take place outside of<br />

this space, and not too close to<br />

bedtime. Allowing yourself to<br />

unwind and relax with a calming<br />

bedtime routine helps to set<br />

the body up for a good night’s<br />

sleep and can help with stress<br />

management. Regular exercise,<br />

and spending time outdoors<br />

each day, can also help maintain<br />

your body clock and facilitate<br />

good sleep patterns.<br />

Lying in bed and worrying<br />

about not falling asleep can<br />

turn your relaxing bedtime<br />

space into one of stress and<br />

anxiety. If you are struggling to<br />

get to sleep, it can be helpful<br />

to get out of bed and leave the<br />

room. Write down any worries<br />

or problems and try to put<br />

them aside to deal with in the<br />

morning. Repeat your calming<br />

bedtime routine or find an<br />

alternative way to relax, then<br />

return to bed when you are feeling<br />

sleepy.<br />

Treatment options<br />

While sleeping tablets may be<br />

used in some cases to help correct<br />

a sleep deprivation problem<br />

where necessary, these<br />

should only be used at the<br />

lowest dose and for the shortest<br />

amount of time possible.<br />

Sleeping tablets can be addictive,<br />

and tolerance commonly<br />

develops with long-term use.<br />

They can also cause drowsiness<br />

which extends to the following<br />

day, leading to confusion and<br />

unsteadiness which can contribute<br />

to an accident or fall.<br />

Supplementing melatonin,<br />

the sleep hormone, can help<br />

to reset the sleep-wake cycle in<br />

those with insomnia. Low-dose<br />

controlled release melatonin<br />

can be acquired at your local<br />

pharmacy if you are over 55<br />

years of age for short term<br />

treatment of insomnia; however<br />

long-term use should be discussed<br />

with your doctor.<br />

Other supplements, such as<br />

valerian root or magnesium,<br />

may aid in improving sleep<br />

quality and correcting sleep disorders.<br />

This can be discussed<br />

with your local pharmacist.<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Pharmacy &<br />

Compounding Chemist<br />

at Mona Vale has operated<br />

as a family-run business<br />

since 1977. Open seven<br />

days; drop in and meet<br />

the highly qualified and<br />

experienced team of Len,<br />

Sam and Amy Papandrea<br />

and Andrew Snow. Find<br />

them at 1771 <strong>Pittwater</strong> Rd;<br />

call 9999 3398.<br />

56 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

There are four main<br />

fundamental building<br />

blocks to sustain the skin<br />

and reduce the observable signs<br />

of aging: Collagen, hyaluronic<br />

acid and calcium. The most<br />

common and plentiful of our<br />

bodies’ proteins is Collagen.<br />

Collagen is manufactured<br />

in our bodies by combining<br />

different amino acids or<br />

building blocks from the protein<br />

found in our food. One of the<br />

primary purposes of Collagen is<br />

to deliver structural scaffolding<br />

for our various tissues to<br />

allow them to stretch while<br />

still preserving the integrity of<br />

the tissue. While a diet rich in<br />

Collagen can help balance the<br />

signs of aging in the skin, it is<br />

also important for bone health,<br />

nails and hair.<br />

The loss of Collagen is<br />

one of the most significant<br />

contributors to our observable<br />

signs of aging, such as<br />

sagging, dull and wrinkled skin.<br />

When our collagen levels are<br />

heightened, our skin will be<br />

firm, smooth and soft because<br />

collagen permits skin cells to<br />

revitalise and repair themselves<br />

continually. By the time we<br />

reach our 80s, we have four<br />

times less Collagen than when<br />

we were in our youth.<br />

Regardless of your age,<br />

making healthy, youthful skin<br />

is harder to attain when certain<br />

lifestyle and environmental<br />

factors also harm your collagen<br />

production. Factors that can<br />

slow the body’s ability to<br />

manufacture Collagen may<br />

include hormone imbalances;<br />

impaired thyroid function;<br />

overwork; processed foods;<br />

fluoridated water; pollution and<br />

dust; hydrogenated cooking<br />

oils; nutritional deficiencies;<br />

radiation; excessive sun<br />

exposure; stress; sugar; poor<br />

liver or kidney function; and<br />

lack of both sleep and exercise.<br />

Health advantages provided<br />

by collagen supplementation<br />

include deeper sleep and<br />

serotonin release due to its<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

glycine content; better blood<br />

clotting and wound healing;<br />

decreased joint pain and<br />

stiffness; improved gut health<br />

and digestion; improved<br />

blood pressure and reduced<br />

cardiovascular harm; better<br />

glucose tolerance; reduced<br />

inflammation and oxidative<br />

stress and therefore having a<br />

positive impact on your skin.<br />

While 28 different types<br />

of Collagen are known<br />

scientifically, most supplements<br />

will contain one or more of the<br />

five most commonly known<br />

collagen types:<br />

n Type 1 – makes up about 90%<br />

of the Collagen in our body.<br />

Nearly all tissue contains Type<br />

1 collagen, including bones,<br />

tendons, connective tissue,<br />

and cartilage, and it is most<br />

abundant in the skin. However,<br />

it degrades over time, becoming<br />

apparent with the appearance of<br />

loss of elasticity, fine lines and<br />

wrinkles.<br />

n Type 2 – is found primarily<br />

in cartilage and provides the<br />

cushion for your bones and<br />

joints.<br />

n Type 3 – is often found<br />

alongside Type 1 Collagen. It<br />

assists with the hydration of<br />

our skin, creating cushion or<br />

plumpness within the second<br />

layer of skin, the dermis.<br />

n Type 4 – makes up the thin<br />

layer outside the cells, giving<br />

them their structure and is<br />

found in the skin, kidneys, liver<br />

and other vital organs.<br />

n Type 5 – helps form keratin<br />

cell surfaces in our hair and<br />

nails. It is also required to form<br />

the cells that create a pregnant<br />

woman’s placenta, which is<br />

the baby’s life support system<br />

inside the womb.<br />

The best way to have<br />

beautiful, healthy skin is to<br />

work from the inside out. A<br />

balanced diet and lifestyle<br />

are imperative. Unhydrolised<br />

or less denatured collagen<br />

supplementation made from<br />

grass-fed beef bones can be<br />

added to your diet with bone<br />

broth daily. Powdered collagen<br />

supplements (pictured) are also<br />

popular, and may be added to<br />

smoothies each day. A powder<br />

that combines both animal and<br />

marine Collagen is best. Other<br />

nutrients the body requires to<br />

synthesise Collagen are biotin<br />

(B7), zinc, vitamin C, copper and<br />

other trace minerals.<br />

The next component to<br />

having healthy, Collagen<br />

supported skin is to stimulate<br />

your skin regeneration topically<br />

with in-clinic professional<br />

treatments, a twice-daily homecare<br />

regime and good quality<br />

skincare products.<br />

The best way to approach<br />

aging and good health is<br />

to work on the inside and<br />

outside. The outcome is going<br />

to provide the best version of<br />

ourselves.<br />

Sue Carroll is at the forefront<br />

of the beauty, wellness<br />

and para-medical profession<br />

with 35 years’ experience on<br />

Sydney’s Northern Beaches.<br />

She leads a dedicated team<br />

of professionals who are<br />

passionate about results for<br />

men and women.<br />

info@skininspiration.com.au<br />

www.skininspiration.com.au<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 57<br />

Hair & Beauty


Business <strong>Life</strong><br />

Business <strong>Life</strong>: Money<br />

Post-election, it’s time to get<br />

your Financial Year sorted<br />

This month a look at<br />

what’s just ahead, plus<br />

how to prepare for the<br />

next financial year… As I write<br />

this the outcome of the Federal<br />

election is not known. Today’s<br />

Sydney Morning Herald has the<br />

headline: Unemployment rate<br />

falls to lowest level since 1974;<br />

Pauline Hanson contracts CO-<br />

VID. I think the pairing of these<br />

two items is seen by the editor<br />

of the SMH as some sort of<br />

good news headline.<br />

The other headline that<br />

caught my attention was: Unemployment<br />

rate at lowest level<br />

since Gough Whitlam was in<br />

power. Now I can vividly recall<br />

the Whitlam ‘It’s Time’ campaign<br />

from the 1970s. There<br />

was a catchy tune, a bit of an<br />

earworm really, not as grating<br />

as the Libs’ ‘hole in your budget<br />

[my bucket]’ advertisement<br />

that has been driving us nuts<br />

at home for weeks but still very<br />

memorable. Kids were chanting<br />

‘we want Gough’ in the school<br />

yard up at Elanora Heights Primary<br />

School, none of us knew<br />

why, it just seemed like the<br />

thing to do. I don’t know if Albo<br />

is quite Gough, but I see that he<br />

wants to replicate the Whitlam<br />

interim Government format so<br />

that he and Penny Wong can<br />

get over to an urgent overseas<br />

meeting – a triumvirate though<br />

instead of a duumvirate allowing<br />

Albo and Wong to travel<br />

while Richard Marles hangs<br />

back and looks after the factory.<br />

Gough was well known<br />

for enjoying his trips so maybe<br />

Albo is a chip off the old block<br />

in that regard but it’s all academic<br />

from where I sit; election<br />

day is still a few days away.<br />

What is absolutely clear is<br />

that a new financial year will<br />

be upon us in just a few<br />

weeks and now is the<br />

time to get a few things<br />

sorted.<br />

The time-sensitive<br />

issues that need<br />

consideration before<br />

30 <strong>June</strong> are matters<br />

such as maximising<br />

superannuation<br />

deductions, expense<br />

prepayments or utilising<br />

the instant asset<br />

write-off provisions.<br />

Superannuation in the<br />

current financial year is deductible<br />

as a concessional<br />

contribution of up to $27,500<br />

from all sources. Some people<br />

with super balances below<br />

$500,000 may be eligible to<br />

make additional carry forward<br />

concessional contributions<br />

from as far back as five years<br />

ago. Non-concessional contributions<br />

(no tax deduction<br />

claimed) are $110,000 p.a. or<br />

$330,000 under the three-year<br />

bring forward provisions. If you<br />

are looking at tipping in the<br />

maximum of $110,000 in this<br />

financial year and $330,000<br />

a few weeks away in the next<br />

year you presumably already<br />

have your ducks in a row.<br />

Small business operators<br />

should recall that compulsory<br />

super is going up to 10.5% of<br />

wages from 1 July. SGC and<br />

deductible Super contributions<br />

for this year need to be physically<br />

paid before 30 <strong>June</strong> if you<br />

wish to obtain the deduction in<br />

the current year otherwise you<br />

have until 28 days following the<br />

end of the quarter (28 July) to<br />

submit SGC contributions.<br />

If you are considering prepaying<br />

business expenses,<br />

you need to do so before<br />

30 <strong>June</strong>. There is a general<br />

12-month rule, meaning the<br />

with Brian Hrnjak<br />

right or benefit paid cannot<br />

extend beyond the earlier of:<br />

12 months from the date the<br />

prepayment is made; or the end<br />

of the taxable year following<br />

the taxable year in which the<br />

payment is made. Prepayments<br />

can be useful if you have had<br />

an exceptional year and want<br />

to average out slightly, if your<br />

turnover rises you run the risk<br />

of paying more in tax.<br />

The instant asset writeoff<br />

provisions for businesses<br />

continue to apply<br />

for this year and also<br />

extend into next year.<br />

The key to using these,<br />

however, is that the asset<br />

needs to be installed<br />

(delivered) and ready for<br />

use by 30 <strong>June</strong>. Ordering<br />

and paying a deposit for<br />

a car in the next few weeks<br />

does not cut it.<br />

It is important to have regard<br />

for the motor vehicle<br />

thresholds that can reduce any<br />

write-off benefits. The first is<br />

the motor vehicle price limit<br />

which is $60,733 for the current<br />

year. The second is any component<br />

of private use (based<br />

on your logbook), this needs<br />

to be excluded from the writeoff<br />

claim. On that topic, any<br />

applicable Fringe Benefits Tax<br />

or your employee contribution<br />

to offset it should have been<br />

calculated as at 31 March <strong>2022</strong><br />

and may need to be included in<br />

the <strong>June</strong> Business Activity Statement.<br />

The car limit of $60,733 only<br />

applies to the cost of passenger<br />

vehicles designed to carry<br />

a load of less than one tonne.<br />

Commercial vehicles with a payload<br />

capacity over this can be<br />

exempt from this threshold and<br />

may be exempt from FBT – astute<br />

readers at this point would<br />

have noticed the use of can<br />

and may, two weasel words in<br />

one sentence that indicates this<br />

is complicated and should be<br />

discussed with your accountant<br />

beforehand. (It does however<br />

go a long way towards explaining<br />

how it is that we sometimes<br />

have more Dodge RAMs around<br />

here than an episode of ‘Yellowstone’.)<br />

A few other things to be<br />

aware of just after the end of<br />

the financial year: the <strong>June</strong><br />

Business Activity Statement will<br />

be due on 28 July if lodging<br />

yourself or 26 August if lodging<br />

through a tax agent.<br />

Single-touch payroll (STP)<br />

finalisation is generally due on<br />

14 July. If you have less than<br />

19 employees and they are all<br />

closely held you have until the<br />

tax return for the business is<br />

due to finalise STP. Employers<br />

with less than 19 employees<br />

and with a mix of related and<br />

unrelated workers have until 30<br />

September to finalise for related<br />

employees and 14 July for<br />

unrelated workers.<br />

The ATO have recently published<br />

their focus list for the<br />

next financial year. There is<br />

continuing emphasis on record<br />

keeping with data matching<br />

employed to check the accuracy<br />

of claims.<br />

Work related expenses will<br />

be another focus area for <strong>2022</strong><br />

mainly because lockdowns<br />

caused such an increase in<br />

‘hybrid working environments’<br />

and one in three returns are<br />

likely to involve working from<br />

home. They will be looking to<br />

verify that a nexus exists and<br />

that records are available.<br />

Rental income is also being<br />

looked at with checks on short<br />

term accommodation activity<br />

including the correct recording<br />

of insurance payouts and<br />

retained rental bonds. The calculation<br />

of interest deductions<br />

and use of redraw accounts are<br />

also part of this review.<br />

The other area that has been<br />

well telegraphed by the ATO are<br />

capital gains and losses from<br />

shares, property and crypto<br />

assets. The ATO has absorbed a<br />

lot of data from banks, trading<br />

providers and coin registries to<br />

form a picture about what has<br />

been occurring and they are<br />

expecting to see more gains<br />

and losses being reported than<br />

in previous years. In practice<br />

we have seen quite a spike in<br />

activity in this area, particularly<br />

regarding crypto currency and<br />

NFTs with intended and unintended<br />

consequences arising<br />

from people swapping currencies<br />

or making transfers to coin<br />

registries or bank accounts.<br />

Brian Hrnjak B Bus CPA (FPS) is<br />

a Director of GHR Accounting<br />

Group Pty Ltd, Certified<br />

Practising Accountants. Offices<br />

at: Suite 12, Ground Floor,<br />

20 Bungan Street Mona Vale<br />

NSW 2103 and Shop 8, 9 – 15<br />

Central Ave Manly NSW 2095,<br />

Telephone: 02 9979-4300,<br />

Webs: www.ghr.com.au and<br />

www.altre.com.au Email:<br />

brian@ghr.com.au<br />

These comments are of a<br />

general nature only and are<br />

not intended as a substitute<br />

for professional advice.<br />

Business <strong>Life</strong><br />

58 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 59


Business <strong>Life</strong>: Law<br />

with Jennifer Harris<br />

School <strong>Life</strong><br />

‘Social Media’ can present<br />

as a terrifying medium...<br />

RELATIONSHIPS:<br />

Children need to<br />

feel they belong.<br />

Business <strong>Life</strong><br />

As readers settle to read<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> it is likely<br />

that before doing so you<br />

will have checked at least one<br />

social media site – Facebook,<br />

LinkedIn, Instagram or Twitter<br />

– as you tend to do throughout<br />

the day. Social media has had<br />

and is having an impact on<br />

every part of our society – not<br />

only in business, the legal<br />

profession and life at its most<br />

personal level, as people share<br />

their most intimate thoughts<br />

and feelings.<br />

Business operators surveyed<br />

have identified reputational<br />

damage from online attacks or<br />

criticism as a primary risk.<br />

Professional Investigators find<br />

that confidential information<br />

which previously would have<br />

been very difficult to obtain can<br />

now be obtained from social<br />

media sites, as well as entirely<br />

new information from analysis<br />

of data, which makes social<br />

media a vital investigative tool.<br />

Insurance companies<br />

dedicated to ensuring that<br />

fraudulent claims are not<br />

paid out look carefully at the<br />

claimant’s digital footprint. On<br />

an industry level, companies<br />

have begun introducing their<br />

own forms of vigilantism by<br />

‘mapping out’ the types of<br />

activities and areas where<br />

fraudulent claims are most<br />

likely to be filed, and circulating<br />

the data among themselves.<br />

Police maintain a social media<br />

presence and Government and<br />

community groups are anxious<br />

about the use of social media<br />

for criminal or terrorist activities;<br />

and the Commonwealth<br />

Government has legislated<br />

to protect children from<br />

cyberbullying attacks derived<br />

mainly from social media.<br />

The legal profession has<br />

recognised the use of sites such<br />

as Facebook and Twitter; its<br />

extensive use by academics and<br />

lawyers is such that that many<br />

courts (including the Supreme<br />

Court) have their own Twitter<br />

accounts for publication of<br />

information and judgments.<br />

So what is social media? The<br />

most common forms are as<br />

follows. (Not an exhaustive list.)<br />

Facebook – a popular free<br />

social networking website that<br />

allows registered users to create<br />

profiles, upload photos and<br />

video, send messages and keep<br />

in touch with people.<br />

There are many billions of<br />

active users on Facebook. It is<br />

said to be currently the world’s<br />

most popular social networking<br />

website.<br />

LinkedIn – a social networking<br />

site designed specifically for the<br />

business community. The aim<br />

for the site is to allow registered<br />

members to establish and<br />

document networks of people<br />

known to them and who they<br />

trust professionally.<br />

A LinkedIn member’s<br />

profile page emphasises<br />

skills, employment history<br />

and education and contains<br />

network news and updates.<br />

Network members are known<br />

as ‘connections’. Unlike other<br />

free social networking LinkedIn<br />

requires connections to have a<br />

pre-existing relationship.<br />

TripAdvisor – a platform<br />

which encourages feedback<br />

from consumers and is the<br />

major source of reputational<br />

damage claims and complaints.<br />

There are now entire websites<br />

dedicated to reputation<br />

protection for restaurants,<br />

hotels or businesses which<br />

receive bad reviews such critical<br />

reviews are a fertile source of<br />

defamation actions.<br />

Instagram – a service that<br />

enables its users to take<br />

pictures and videos, and share<br />

them either publicly or privately<br />

as well as through other social<br />

networking platforms, such as<br />

Facebook or Twitter.<br />

Twitter – a tweet is a post on<br />

Twitter in which users deliver<br />

280-character updates of what<br />

is going on in their lives which<br />

they consider are interesting<br />

or amusing to their contacts or<br />

followers. Twitter allows people<br />

to post, from their phones,<br />

short updates and often about<br />

things that irritate them like<br />

road rage and politics.<br />

On Twitter millions of ‘tweets’<br />

are sent out every second and<br />

can be retweeted. Elon Musk’s<br />

recent takeover of Twitter is<br />

causing worldwide interest and<br />

has encouraged discussions on<br />

freedom of speech.<br />

So much of social media is<br />

unfiltered, as people discuss<br />

their thoughts and provide a<br />

more-or-less permanent record<br />

of their activities.<br />

So how should one treat<br />

social media? If in business, a<br />

prudent course would be to be<br />

circumspect and careful and<br />

to make a distinction between<br />

business and pleasure, between<br />

private and public matters; and<br />

if in doubt – stay offline!<br />

Comment supplied by<br />

Jennifer Harris, of Jennifer<br />

Harris & Associates,<br />

Solicitors, 4/57 Avalon<br />

Parade, Avalon Beach.<br />

T: 9973 2011. F: 9918 3290.<br />

E: jennifer@jenniferharris.com.au<br />

W: www.jenniferharris.com.au<br />

60 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

Boys’ critical early years<br />

Research has shown that when teachers prioritise building strong<br />

connections with students, it significantly impacts long-term<br />

wellbeing in students, as well as the ability to learn and stay<br />

engaged at school.<br />

Mosman Prep Headmaster and Newport resident Peter Grimes<br />

agrees that while safe, supportive relationships and early positive<br />

learning experiences begin at home, they could be powerfully<br />

enhanced through connection with others outside the family, such<br />

as teachers or sporting coaches.<br />

“Building strong relationships with students is a vital part of our<br />

approach to education at Mosman Prep, whether at the school<br />

itself, at our Outdoor Learning Centre at Terrey Hills, or during<br />

school camps and excursions,” Mr Grimes said.<br />

“Relationships with caring, responsive adults and early positive<br />

experiences build strong brain architecture for children.<br />

“The child then develops inner security for life, and his brain<br />

acquires the skills of intimate communication, and a love of life.”<br />

He said that to be free to focus on their learning, children need to<br />

feel that they belong, are understood, respected and appreciated.<br />

“Our parents understand and value the importance of<br />

relationship, deep connection, partnership and community<br />

(students, staff and parents) to learning success, and appreciate our<br />

comprehensive and invested approach.”<br />

Mr Grimes stressed the importance of being aware that the first<br />

critical period of brain development begins around age 2 and<br />

concludes around age 7.<br />

“Early intervention in Preschool and Primary School lays the<br />

foundation for a child’s mental development, growth and ultimately<br />

their success in the future,” Mr Grimes said. “Because at this time,<br />

a growing child’s mind is like putty and can be easily moulded; the<br />

words we use and the actions we take help children’s brains actually<br />

change and be built, as they undergo new experiences.”<br />

He added early years learning was crucial in laying the<br />

foundation for a child’s holistic education and vital for acquiring<br />

core reading/numeracy skills<br />

“Providing the right ingredients for healthy development for<br />

children from the start, produces better outcomes, rather than<br />

trying to fix problems later,” he said.<br />

“At Mosman Prep, we are intentional about maximising this<br />

critical period in a boy’s development through purposeful play<br />

to explicit instruction in literacy and numeracy, creative arts,<br />

languages, physical education, and spiritual and character<br />

development.<br />

“This helps develop skills that lead to better relationships, better<br />

mental health, and more meaningful and compassionate lives.”<br />

*Mosman Prep is holding an Open Evening from 4.30-8pm on<br />

Thursday 16 <strong>June</strong>; more info 9968 4044.<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 61<br />

Business <strong>Life</strong>


Trades & Services<br />

Trades & Services<br />

AIR CONDITIONING<br />

Alliance Climate Control<br />

Call 02 9186 4179<br />

Air Conditioning & Electrical<br />

Professionals. Specialists in Air<br />

Conditioning Installation, Service, Repair<br />

& Replacement.<br />

NORTH EAST AIR<br />

Call Tim 0400 364 913<br />

We will deliver all your heating and<br />

cooling options; prompt, courteous<br />

service.<br />

AUTO REPAIRS<br />

British & Swedish Motors<br />

Call 9970 6654<br />

Services Range Rover, Land Rover, Saab<br />

and Volvo with the latest in diagnostic<br />

equipment.<br />

Narrabeen Tyrepower<br />

Call 9970 6670<br />

Stocks all popular brands including Cooper<br />

4WD. Plus they’ll do all mechanical repairs<br />

and rego inspections.<br />

BATTERIES<br />

Battery Business<br />

Call 9970 6999<br />

Batteries for all applications. Won’t be<br />

beaten on price or service. Free testing,<br />

7 days.<br />

BOAT SERVICES<br />

Avalon Marine Upholstery<br />

Call Simon 9918 9803<br />

Makes cushions for boats, patio and pool<br />

furniture, window seats.<br />

BUILDING<br />

Southern Stairs<br />

Call 9542 1344<br />

Specialists in high-quality staircase for 35<br />

years; new Northern Beaches showroom.<br />

CLEANING<br />

Amazing Clean<br />

Call Andrew 0412 475 2871<br />

Specialists in blinds, curtains and<br />

awnings. Clean, repair, supply new.<br />

Aussie Clean Team<br />

Call John 0478 799 680<br />

For a sparkling finish, inside and out.<br />

Also light maintenance/repairs. Free<br />

quotes; fully insured.<br />

The Aqua Clean Team<br />

Call Mark 0449 049 101<br />

Quality window washing, pressure cleaning,<br />

carpet washing, building soft wash.<br />

ELECTRICAL<br />

Alliance Service Group<br />

Call Adrian 9063 4658<br />

All services & repairs, 24hr. Lighting<br />

installation, switchboard upgrade. Seniors<br />

discount 5%.<br />

Eamon Dowling Electrical<br />

Call Eamon 0410 457 373<br />

For all electrical needs including phone,<br />

TV and data. <strong>Pittwater</strong>-based. Reliable;<br />

quality service guaranteed.<br />

FLOOR COVERINGS<br />

Blue Tongue Carpets<br />

Call Stephan or Roslyn 9979 7292<br />

Northern Beaches Flooring Centre has<br />

been family owned & run for over 20<br />

years. Carpets, Tiles, Timber, Laminates,<br />

Hybrids & Vinyls. Open 6 days.<br />

GARDENS<br />

!Abloom Ace Gardening<br />

Call 0415 817 880<br />

Full range of gardening services including<br />

landscaping, maintenance and rubbish<br />

removal.<br />

Living Gardens Landscape<br />

Call Richy 0475 148417<br />

Lawn & garden maintenance, garden<br />

regeneration, stone work, residential &<br />

commercial.<br />

Melaleuca Landscapes<br />

Call Sandy 0416 276 066<br />

Professional design and construction<br />

for every garden situation. Sustainable<br />

vegetable gardens and waterfront<br />

specialist.<br />

Precision Tree Services<br />

Call Adam 0410 736 105<br />

Adam Bridger; professional tree care by<br />

qualified arborists and tree surgeons.<br />

GUTTERS & ROOFING<br />

Cloud9 R&G<br />

Call Tommy 0447 999 929<br />

Prompt and reliable service; gutter<br />

cleaning and installation, leak detection,<br />

roof installation and painting. Also roof<br />

repairs specialist.<br />

Ken Wilson Roofing<br />

Call 0419 466 783<br />

Leaking roofs, tile repairs, tiles replaced,<br />

metal roof repairs, gutter cleaning, valley<br />

irons replaced.<br />

HANDYMEN<br />

Hire A Hubby<br />

Call 1800 803 339<br />

Extensive services including carpentry,<br />

outdoor maintenance, painting and plastering<br />

and more.<br />

Local Handyman<br />

Call Jono 0413 313299<br />

Small and medium-sized building jobs,<br />

also welding & metalwork; licensed.<br />

HOT WATER<br />

Hot Water Maintenance NB<br />

Call 9982 1265<br />

Local emergency specialists, 7 days. Sales,<br />

service, installation. Warranty agents, fully<br />

accredited.<br />

Trades & Services<br />

62 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 63


Trades & Services<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Puzzler<br />

Compiled by David Stickley<br />

Trades & Services<br />

KITCHENS<br />

Collaroy Kitchen Centre<br />

Call 9972 9300<br />

Danish design excellence. Local beaches<br />

specialists in kitchens, bathrooms and<br />

joinery. Visit the showroom in Collaroy.<br />

Seabreeze Kitchens<br />

Call 9938 5477<br />

Specialists in all kitchen needs; design,<br />

fitting, consultation. Excellent trades.<br />

LOCKSMITHS<br />

Mosman Locksmiths<br />

Call 9969 6333<br />

40 years servicing the Beaches; specialists<br />

in lock-outs including automotive, rekeying,<br />

smart lock security; also door hardware<br />

and safe sales & installation.<br />

MASSAGE & FITNESS<br />

Avalon Physiotherapy<br />

Call 9918 3373<br />

Provide specialist treatment for neck &<br />

back pain, sports injuries, orthopaedic<br />

problems.<br />

PAINTING<br />

Cloud9 Painting<br />

Call 0447 999 929<br />

Your one-stop shop for home or office<br />

painting; interiors, exteriors and also roof<br />

painting. Call for a quote.<br />

DISCLAIMER: The editorial and advertising content in<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> has been provided by a number of sources. Any<br />

opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Editor or<br />

Publisher of <strong>Pittwater</strong> <strong>Life</strong> and no responsibility is taken for<br />

the accuracy of the information contained within. Readers<br />

should make their own enquiries directly to any organisations<br />

or businesses prior to making any plans or taking any action.<br />

PEST CONTROL<br />

Predator Pest Control<br />

Call 0417 276 962<br />

predatorpestcontrol.com.au<br />

Environmental services at their best.<br />

Comprehensive control. Eliminate all<br />

manner of pests.<br />

PLUMBING<br />

Mark Ellison Plumbing<br />

Call 0431 000 400<br />

Advanced solutions for sewer & stormwater<br />

pipe relining: Upfront price, 25-year warranty.<br />

RUBBISH REMOVAL<br />

Brown Bros Skip Bins<br />

Call 1300 879 688<br />

Local waste management & environmental<br />

services experts. Bins to suit, delivered<br />

between 2 & 24 hours. Green footprint.<br />

Jack’s Rubbish Removals<br />

Call Jack 0403 385 312<br />

Up to 45% cheaper than skips. Latest<br />

health regulations. Old-fashioned honesty<br />

& reliability. Free quotes.<br />

One 2 Dump<br />

Call Josh 0450 712 779<br />

Seven-days-a-week pick-up service<br />

includes general household rubbish,<br />

construction, commercial plus vegetation.<br />

Also car removals.<br />

UPHOLSTERY<br />

Luxafoam North<br />

Call 0414 468 434<br />

Local specialists in all aspects of outdoor &<br />

indoor seating. Custom service, expert advice.<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 One who deliberately causes<br />

damage to productive capacity,<br />

especially as a political act (8)<br />

5 One of the photographic topics<br />

on display at the 10th Great<br />

Historic Photographic Exhibition<br />

put on by the Avalon Beach<br />

Historical Society (6)<br />

10 Essential fishing gear (5)<br />

11 A treatment available at<br />

Warriewood’s United Dental Clinic<br />

no doubt (4,5)<br />

12 Road divider (6,5)<br />

13 A number of things or persons<br />

that belong together or resemble<br />

one another or are usually found<br />

together (3)<br />

14 A medicine man and priest who<br />

works with the supernatural (6)<br />

16 Aroused to impatience or<br />

anger (7)<br />

18 Large African antelope having<br />

a head with horns like an ox and a<br />

long, tufted tail (3)<br />

19 Brief beachwear first<br />

manufactured in Sydney by the<br />

MacRae Knitting Mills in 1928 (7)<br />

21 A paper of little substance (6)<br />

24 The medium through which<br />

radio waves are sent (3)<br />

25 Team that came second at the<br />

<strong>2022</strong> Australian Surf <strong>Life</strong> Saving<br />

Championships (7,4)<br />

28 Event at which Max Brooks and<br />

Jayke Rees (from 25-across) won<br />

gold at the <strong>2022</strong> Australian Surf<br />

<strong>Life</strong> Saving Championships (6,3)<br />

29 Gemma Rasdall was selected<br />

as a finalist for this art prize in<br />

<strong>2022</strong> (5)<br />

30 To make a stand or make<br />

efforts in opposition (6)<br />

31 Riders who are well catered for<br />

on the Northern Beaches (8)<br />

DOWN<br />

1 A plan pursued secretly,<br />

insidiously, by intrigue, or for<br />

private ends (6)<br />

2 Reserve in Warriewood that was<br />

once proposed as a site for an<br />

Olympic-sized swimming pool (7)<br />

3 Electric vehicle brand (5)<br />

4 Revolts, rebellions (9)<br />

6 Tenants of a house, estate,<br />

office, etc. (9)<br />

7 Chocolatier in Warriewood,<br />

_______ and Edmunds (7)<br />

8 The state or situation of being<br />

alone (8)<br />

9 A guided look at Barrenjoey<br />

Lighthouse, perhaps (4)<br />

15 Family restaurant, one of a<br />

large chain, located in Warriewood<br />

(9)<br />

16 Legal power or right (9)<br />

17 One, generally, who frequents<br />

Elizabeth Park and Pathilda<br />

Reserve, perhaps (8)<br />

20 Very small audio receivers (7)<br />

22 Areas of high ground (7)<br />

23 A way of approaching or<br />

reaching or entering (6)<br />

26 The break of waves on the<br />

shore (4)<br />

27 A piece of rough-surfaced<br />

absorbent cloth used for drying<br />

oneself after swimming at the<br />

beach, possibly (5)<br />

[Solution page 72]<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Puzzler<br />

64 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 65


Food <strong>Life</strong><br />

with Janelle Bloom<br />

For more recipes go to janellebloom.com.au<br />

Food <strong>Life</strong><br />

Recipes: janellebloom.com.au; facebook.com/culinaryinbloom; instagram.com/janellegbloom/ Photos: Adobe Stock<br />

Give Winter a cold shoulder<br />

with wonderful warmers...<br />

Winter certainly feels like it has hit us<br />

early this year. I have been making<br />

soups for a few weeks already – and I<br />

need to change things up. So, if like me, you’re<br />

looking for some delicious, hearty inspiration<br />

French-style<br />

bacon, cheese<br />

and egg toastie<br />

Makes 4<br />

8 slices crusty white bread, cut<br />

1cm thick<br />

4 tbs Dijon mustard<br />

30g baby spinach<br />

300g Gruyère, coarsely grated<br />

60g butter, coarsely chopped<br />

8 pieces shortcut bacon<br />

Olive oil, for cooking<br />

4 eggs<br />

Béchamel sauce<br />

50g butter, coarsely chopped<br />

1/3 cup (50g) plain flour<br />

200ml full cream milk<br />

Pinch ground nutmeg<br />

1. For béchamel, melt the<br />

butter in a saucepan over<br />

medium heat. Add the flour,<br />

cook stirring for 1-2 minutes<br />

until slightly grainy. Remove<br />

from the heat. Slowly add<br />

the milk, whisking constantly<br />

until smooth. Return to the<br />

heat, stir over medium heat<br />

until sauce comes to the<br />

boil. Add nutmeg, season<br />

to taste, cover loosely<br />

with plastic wrap and set<br />

aside until cooled to room<br />

temperature.<br />

2. Place four slices of bread on<br />

a work surface, spread with<br />

mustard, top with spinach<br />

and Gruyère; sandwich with<br />

remaining bread.<br />

3. Preheat grill to high.<br />

4. Melt the butter in a large,<br />

non-stick frying pan over<br />

medium heat until foaming;<br />

add sandwiches to pan<br />

and cook, for 2-3 minutes<br />

each side until light golden.<br />

Remove to a tray. Spread the<br />

tops thickly with béchamel<br />

sauce. Grill for 3-4 minutes<br />

until the top is golden.<br />

5. Meanwhile, wipe the frying<br />

pan clean and heat over<br />

medium heat. Add the bacon<br />

and cook in batches for<br />

2-3 minutes each side until<br />

golden. Remove to a plate.<br />

Wipe the pan clean.<br />

6. Add the oil to the frying pan<br />

and fry eggs for 2-3 minutes,<br />

or until cooked to your liking<br />

(3-4 minutes for soft yolks).<br />

Top each sandwich with<br />

bacon and an egg. Season<br />

with pepper and serve.<br />

to serve the family – that importantly won’t<br />

break the bank – look no further. There’s<br />

something for everyone: meat, veggie, classic,<br />

exotic, spicy, wholesome… you choose! Or try<br />

them all! Stay warm and enjoy…<br />

Classic cauliflower<br />

soup<br />

Serves 4<br />

3 tbs olive oil<br />

1 tbs butter<br />

2 leeks, halved, washed, thinly<br />

sliced<br />

2 garlic cloves, crushed<br />

1 cauliflower (about 1kg),<br />

coarsely chopped<br />

1 large Sebago potato, peeled,<br />

coarsely chopped<br />

2 cups (500ml) chicken or<br />

vegetable stock<br />

1 cup (250ml) full cream milk<br />

2 fresh bay leaves<br />

1 tbs thyme leaves<br />

½ cup crème fraiche, optional<br />

1 lemon, rind finely grated<br />

toasted sourdough, to serve<br />

1. Heat the oil and butter in a<br />

large saucepan over medium<br />

heat. Add the leek and garlic;<br />

cook, stirring occasionally for<br />

5 minutes or until soft. Add<br />

the cauliflower and potato<br />

and cook, stirring often for<br />

8 minutes until they start to<br />

soften.<br />

2. Add the stock, milk and bay<br />

leaves and thyme. Season<br />

with pepper and bring to the<br />

boil over high heat. Reduce<br />

the heat to low, partially cover<br />

and simmer for 15 minutes<br />

until the vegetables are<br />

tender. Remove from the heat<br />

and remove the bay leaves.<br />

3. Blend or process the mixture<br />

until smooth. Stir in the crème<br />

fraiche and lemon rind, stir<br />

over medium heat until hot,<br />

adding more stock to adjust<br />

the consistency to your<br />

liking. Taste and season with<br />

salt and pepper. Serve with<br />

toasted sourdough.<br />

Peri Peri chicken<br />

casserole<br />

Serve 4-5<br />

2 tbs plain flour<br />

8-10 chicken thigh cutlets<br />

1/3 cup (80ml) olive oil<br />

2 small red onions, chopped<br />

400g can cherry tomatoes<br />

200g yellow or red fresh cherry<br />

tomatoes<br />

2 red capsicums, chopped<br />

1/3 cup (80ml) Peri-Peri<br />

marinade (Medium heat)<br />

Coriander and cooked rice or<br />

flatbread, to serve<br />

Peri peri spice mix<br />

2 tbs sweet paprika,<br />

2 tbs smoked paprika<br />

2 tsp dried oregano<br />

2 tbs ground cumin<br />

2 tbs ground coriander<br />

2 tsp each garlic and onion<br />

powder<br />

2 tsp brown sugar<br />

1 tsp sea salt flakes<br />

1 tsp coarse black pepper<br />

1. Combine all the peri peri spice<br />

mix ingredients together. Set<br />

aside. Preheat oven to 150°C<br />

fan-forced.<br />

2. Place the flour and ¼ cup<br />

of the peri peri spice mix<br />

in a snap lock bag. Add the<br />

chicken. Secure the bag and<br />

shake until well coated.<br />

3. Heat 2 tbs of the oil in an<br />

8-cup (2 litre) flameproof<br />

(stove top and ovenproof)<br />

casserole pan over medium<br />

heat until hot. Add half the<br />

chicken and cook 3 minutes<br />

each side until golden.<br />

Transfer to a plate. Repeat<br />

with the remaining chicken.<br />

4. Add the remaining oil and<br />

onion to the pan and cook,<br />

stirring, for 3-4 minutes or<br />

until the onion softens slightly.<br />

Add any of the spiced flour<br />

mixture left in the bag, cook,<br />

stirring for 1 minute. Add<br />

the can and fresh tomatoes,<br />

capsicum and marinade and<br />

bring to the boil. Return the<br />

chicken and any juices to the<br />

pan, poking the chicken into<br />

the sauce. Cover with a lid.<br />

Place into the oven and bake<br />

for 1½ hours or until chicken is<br />

cooked through. Scatter over<br />

the coriander and serve with<br />

rice or flatbread.<br />

Janelle’s Tips: The peri peri<br />

marinade is a little spicy – you<br />

can replace it with tomato<br />

passata if you want to reduce<br />

the heat; also the peri peri spice<br />

mix makes about 2/3 cup. You<br />

can store unused mix in a clean<br />

airtight jar for up to 12 months.<br />

Irish stew<br />

Serves 6<br />

1.5kg chuck steak, cut into<br />

3-4cm pieces<br />

¼ cup olive oil<br />

1 brown onion, finely chopped<br />

3 rindless rashers bacon, diced<br />

2 stalks celery, chopped<br />

2 carrots, peeled cut into 3-4cm<br />

pieces<br />

2 tbs tomato paste<br />

2 tbs plain flour<br />

1 cup red wine<br />

440ml can Guinness<br />

1½ cups beef stock<br />

3 fresh or 2 dried bay leaves<br />

1kg Desiree potato peeled, cut<br />

into 3-4cm pieces<br />

Chopped flat-leaf parsley, to<br />

serve<br />

1. Preheat the oven to 130°C<br />

fan-forced. Season the beef<br />

with salt and pepper.<br />

2. Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil<br />

in a large frying pan over<br />

high heat. Add half the beef,<br />

cook, turning for 3 minutes<br />

or until browned. Remove to<br />

a plate and repeat with oil<br />

and remaining beef.<br />

3. Add the remaining oil to the<br />

pan. Add the onion, bacon,<br />

celery and carrots. Cook,<br />

stirring for 5 minutes. Stir in<br />

the tomato paste, then the<br />

flour. Cook for 1 minute.<br />

4. Add the wine and Guinness<br />

and bring to a simmer.<br />

Simmer for 5-10 minutes or<br />

until reduced by half.<br />

5. Add the stock and bring to<br />

the boil. Return the beef<br />

to pan with bay leaves and<br />

bring to a simmer.<br />

6. Transfer the stew to an ovenproof<br />

casserole, cover with a<br />

tight-fitting lid. Place into the<br />

oven and cook for 2 hours.<br />

7. Meanwhile, place the<br />

potatoes into a saucepan,<br />

cover with cold water and<br />

bring to the boil, boil gently<br />

for 10 minutes until just<br />

tender. Drain well.<br />

8. Add the potatoes to the stew,<br />

cover and return to the oven<br />

for a further 2 hours until the<br />

beef is tender. Remove the<br />

bay leaves. Top with parsley<br />

and serve.<br />

Warm upsidedown<br />

pineapple<br />

gingerbread cake<br />

Serves 8<br />

125g butter, melted<br />

½ cup dark brown sugar<br />

½ cup golden syrup<br />

½ cup full cream milk<br />

1 egg, lightly beaten<br />

1 cup plain flour<br />

1 cup self-raising flour<br />

1 tbs ground ginger<br />

1 tsp ground cinnamon<br />

Double thick cream, to serve<br />

Pineapple base<br />

440g can pineapple slices in<br />

natural juice, drained<br />

½ cup brown sugar<br />

75g butter, melted<br />

1. Preheat the oven to 160°C<br />

fan-forced. Grease a 6cmdeep,<br />

22cm (base) round<br />

cake pan. Line base and side<br />

with baking paper.<br />

2. For the pineapple base, place<br />

the pineapple slices on plate<br />

lined with paper towel (you<br />

will need 7 pineapple rings).<br />

Pat dry. Sprinkle the brown<br />

sugar over base of prepared<br />

pan. Drizzle with melted<br />

butter. Arrange pineapple<br />

over the butter and sugar<br />

mixture.<br />

3. Place the butter, dark brown<br />

sugar, golden syrup and<br />

milk in a saucepan. Stir<br />

over medium heat for 4-5<br />

minutes or until the sugar<br />

has dissolved (do not boil).<br />

Transfer to a large heatproof<br />

bowl. Cool for 10 minutes.<br />

4. Whisk the egg into the butter<br />

mixture. Sift the flours and<br />

spices together over the<br />

butter mixture and whisk<br />

until smooth. Spoon over the<br />

pineapple. Bake for 55-60<br />

minutes or until a skewer<br />

inserted in centre comes out<br />

clean. Cool in the cake pan<br />

for 10 minutes then turn out<br />

onto a serving plate.<br />

5. Serve warm with cream.<br />

Food <strong>Life</strong><br />

66 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 67


Food <strong>Life</strong><br />

Food <strong>Life</strong><br />

Pick of the Month:<br />

Cauliflower<br />

Cauliflower is the edible cumin, coriander, cream,<br />

flower of a plant from the milk, cheese, butter, walnuts,<br />

Brassica family, which also lentils, chickpeas.<br />

includes cabbage, Brussel<br />

sprouts and broccoli. The Whole roasted<br />

large green leaves play an cauliflower<br />

important role by covering Serves 4-6 (as a side)<br />

the head as it grows to<br />

prevent the cauliflowers<br />

exposure to sunlight,<br />

resulting in its snowy white<br />

appearance.<br />

Buying<br />

Look for firm, tight heads<br />

without bruises, yellowing<br />

or brown spots. The creamy<br />

white florets should be<br />

pressed tightly together.<br />

Try to buy a head where the<br />

leaves are intact; they should<br />

be green and fresh-looking.<br />

Avoid cauliflower with loosely<br />

packed or spreading florets.<br />

Storage<br />

Refrigerate unwashed, stored<br />

in a plastic bag.<br />

Nutrition<br />

Cauliflowers are an excellent<br />

source of vitamin C. Also, a<br />

great source of dietary fibre<br />

and good provider of folate<br />

and complex carbohydrates.<br />

Goes with<br />

Lemon, potatoes, leek, sweet<br />

potato, thyme, garlic, most<br />

spices especially cinnamon,<br />

1 medium (about 1.25kg)<br />

whole cauliflower<br />

1 cup vegetable stock<br />

1 tsp smoked paprika<br />

2 tsp dry mustard<br />

½ tsp seas salt flakes, crushed<br />

2 tbs olive oil<br />

1 garlic clove, crushed<br />

2 tbs chopped green onions,<br />

to serve<br />

1. Preheat<br />

the oven<br />

to 200°C<br />

fan-forced.<br />

Cut a cross<br />

into the<br />

base of the<br />

cauliflower.<br />

Place in a large,<br />

heavy-based cast<br />

iron pan or roasting<br />

pan.<br />

2. Pour the stock into the<br />

pan. Combine the paprika,<br />

mustard, salt oil and garlic.<br />

Season well with pepper<br />

then brush all over the<br />

cauliflower. Cover with a<br />

lid or two layers of foil.<br />

3. Bake for 30 minutes.<br />

Remove the lid or foil then<br />

roast, uncovered, for a<br />

further 15 minutes or until<br />

the cauliflower is tender<br />

and golden. Sprinkle with<br />

green onions, season and<br />

serve.<br />

In Season<br />

<strong>June</strong><br />

Apples (Pink Lady, Jazz and<br />

Kanzi for eating / Golden<br />

Delicious for cooking);<br />

bananas; Custard apples;<br />

Navel and Cara Cara<br />

oranges; pears; mandarins;<br />

passionfruit; quince and<br />

rhubarb. Also avocados;<br />

beetroot; broccolini/broccoli;<br />

Brussels sprouts; eggplant;<br />

leeks; fennel; potatoes,<br />

pumpkin; Sweet potato;<br />

swede; turnips and onions.<br />

Tasty Morsels<br />

Some Tiny Morsels to savour in <strong>June</strong><br />

Be Civic minded<br />

in Mona Vale<br />

<strong>Pittwater</strong> Place has several casual<br />

eateries including The Old Civic, a<br />

cafe and diner fronting Park St. Follow<br />

the arrow on the back wall straight<br />

to the counter where you can order<br />

chilli egg tacos or buttermilk pancakes<br />

with eggs, bacon, hash browns and<br />

maple syrup for breakfast and double<br />

cheeseburgers for lunch.<br />

Alfonso taking<br />

his wood pizzas<br />

on the road<br />

Cafe owner Alfonso Rinaldi<br />

has recently called time on his<br />

eponymous Avalon cafe after<br />

seven years, but he’s still doing<br />

what he loves. You’ll find him<br />

and his portable wood-fired<br />

pizza oven on Friday nights<br />

at the Avalon Bowling Club.<br />

Popular pizza toppings include<br />

garlic prawns and prosciutto<br />

with bocconcini.<br />

New Surf Club looks<br />

on the 'Brightside'<br />

Brookvale’s Nine Yards Coffee is literally<br />

looking on the ‘Brightside’. It’ll be the<br />

name of their new cafe at the renovated<br />

Mona Vale Surf <strong>Life</strong> Saving Club. The<br />

70-seat cafe will have a tweaked menu<br />

with more seafood, choices like dukkah<br />

eggs, grab-and-go options and their own<br />

blend of coffee. Brightside should open<br />

in Spring.<br />

with Beverley Hudec<br />

Black Honey has<br />

sweet Scandi vibe<br />

Black Honey is one of those cafes<br />

that’s pared back with a Scandi<br />

feel. It’s close to Narrabeen beach<br />

too. Post-surf, nip across Ocean St<br />

and order a coffee with a muffin or<br />

an obligatory bacon and egg roll.<br />

The small menu also has avo on<br />

toast, chicken schnitzel wraps and<br />

sandwiches.<br />

Tasty Dining Morsels Guide<br />

68 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

Three of a kind: Chocolate<br />

Chocoholics already know<br />

that Warriewood is home to<br />

artisan chocolatier Lindsay and<br />

Edmunds. There are kid-friendly<br />

chocolate teddies as well as<br />

bars, jars and chilled cabinets of<br />

goodies (left) for discerning adults.<br />

There’s a small cafe too selling<br />

organic white, milk and dark<br />

hot chocolates as well as coffee,<br />

sausage rolls and sandwiches.<br />

Avalon’s Sunset Diner pimps<br />

chocolate several ways. S’mores<br />

is an all-American combo<br />

featuring chocolate sauce,<br />

marshmallows and cookie<br />

crumble. Cookie dough has warm<br />

choc-chip cookies and chocolate<br />

ganache. The Black Forest<br />

sundae overloads chocolate cake,<br />

chocolate ganache and whipped<br />

cream with cherry jam.<br />

For a Friday night chochazelnut<br />

induced coma, try<br />

Golly Gosh’s After Dark dessert<br />

menu. The Mona Vale cafe has<br />

acquired a fan club for decadent,<br />

shareable treats like Belgian<br />

waffles piled high with ice<br />

cream, berries and topped with<br />

little jars of Nutella. If that’s not<br />

enough, there’s also Nutellainfused<br />

hot chocolate.<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 69


Garden <strong>Life</strong><br />

Garden <strong>Life</strong><br />

Just leave it – the tough-as-nails<br />

plant that can tolerate neglect<br />

Over 100 years ago The<br />

Cast Iron Plant (main)<br />

was one of the most<br />

popular plants in Victorian<br />

conservatories. For many<br />

years Aspidistras were a<br />

forgotten indoor plant but<br />

recently, not surprisingly, they<br />

have regained their popularity.<br />

The name<br />

describes them<br />

well. They are<br />

tolerant of<br />

neglect, dryness,<br />

low light,<br />

heaters and air<br />

conditioning<br />

and only need<br />

to be re-potted<br />

every three<br />

or four years,<br />

nevertheless even<br />

though they are<br />

such forgiving<br />

plants they will<br />

respond well to some TLC,<br />

regular water and fresh air.<br />

These elegant plants are the<br />

perfect plant for beginners or<br />

busy working families.<br />

Aspidistras can be grown<br />

in shade or semi-shade in the<br />

garden, where they will spread<br />

to fill in dry, dull areas along<br />

the side paths under trees.<br />

They can also be grown in<br />

pots indoors.<br />

I have clumps of aspidistras<br />

that have been established for<br />

more than 20 years. I thought<br />

I knew them well – until I<br />

was amazed to see a flower<br />

appear in May. Maybe due to<br />

the unseasonal rain? I am not<br />

sure. This tiny purple and gold<br />

flower (below) has popped up<br />

in a pot at soil level.<br />

Traditionally grown as<br />

foliage plants, Aspidistras<br />

do occasionally flower but<br />

only on mature<br />

plants. Maybe<br />

more frequently<br />

than I realised<br />

as the flowers<br />

appear below<br />

and behind the<br />

tall glossy dark<br />

green leaves that<br />

grow up from<br />

the rhizomes<br />

under the soil.<br />

After looking<br />

carefully, I found<br />

several flowers<br />

that were hiding in the garden<br />

under leaf litter.<br />

Aspidistra flowers have no<br />

scent, so they don’t attract<br />

bees or insects; instead they<br />

rely on snails and slugs at<br />

ground level to fertilise them.<br />

There are several varieties<br />

of aspidistras with either<br />

variegated or spotted leaves<br />

but the most common is the<br />

plain green Aspidistra Elatior.<br />

The variegated varieties need<br />

more light. All will grow in full<br />

or semi-shade, but none will<br />

tolerate direct sun.<br />

with Gabrielle Bryant<br />

70 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

Calla Lillies for Spring joy<br />

In the language of<br />

flowers, Calla lilies<br />

are a symbol of love,<br />

devotion, purity,<br />

beauty and innocence.<br />

There are many<br />

legends and stories<br />

where the lilies have<br />

been sent by lovers<br />

to their partners, or<br />

used at funerals as<br />

a token of respect.<br />

These stories date back to the Queen<br />

of Sheba who its written gave a calla<br />

lily to King Solomon as a token of<br />

devotion, circa the 10th century BC.<br />

This is the month to plant calla lily<br />

tubers. Callas are close relations of<br />

white Arum lilies. They are dormant<br />

in Winter but will give you flowers<br />

from late Spring until Summer. They<br />

are easy to grow, either in pots or in<br />

the ground. The tall, arrow-shaped<br />

leaves will appear as the weather<br />

warms up.<br />

Plant them in full sun or semishade<br />

– morning sun is best; without<br />

six hours of sunlight each day they<br />

will not flower well.<br />

Add plenty of blood and bone,<br />

organic compost or cow manure to the<br />

soil before planting. Plant the tubers<br />

Escallonias are small- to medium-growing shrubs that make<br />

the perfect flowering hedge of any size from a low border to<br />

a privacy screen 3 metres high.<br />

Escallonias look delicate, with their mass of tiny fragrant flowers<br />

and small glossy green leaves, but their appearance is deceptive.<br />

They are easy to grow, salt-tolerant and fast growing. They are<br />

easily clipped into shape. They will grow in semi-shade but for the<br />

most flowers, plant them in the full sun. Once established they<br />

need little attention, surviving dry conditions and poor soil, but for<br />

best results, as with most plants, regular water and some good soil<br />

will give you the fastest growth.<br />

For a taller hedge of 2-3 metres, choose from white Escallonia<br />

Iveyi, pink Escallonia Apple Blossom, or bright pink Escallonia<br />

rubra or red Escallonia Red Knight.<br />

Escallonia Pink Elle and Newport Dwarf are low-growing<br />

varieties for lower hedging of 1 metre and borders. Pink Pixie is<br />

the baby perfect for pots and rockeries.<br />

When planting a tall hedge, plant the shrubs 1 metre apart and<br />

begin to clip them right from the beginning to keep the hedge<br />

thick and strong. If you wait for the plants to grow tall before<br />

clipping into shape, the hedge will never be thick to ground level.<br />

For smaller varieties, 60cm apart is best.<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

at least 10cm deep in<br />

well-drained, moist<br />

garden soil. They need<br />

good drainage, but<br />

they must not dry out.<br />

When planting the<br />

tubers, plant them<br />

with the rough side<br />

up.<br />

If you plant them<br />

in pots, keep them<br />

outside until the<br />

flowers appear, then bring them inside<br />

to enjoy their cheerful colour.<br />

When your plants die down again,<br />

next Winter you can leave them<br />

alone to form a clump or lift them<br />

to divide. The tubers will have small<br />

bulblets on the side. Alternatively,<br />

you can cut the tuber, making sure<br />

that each piece has an ‘eye’ for new<br />

shoots.<br />

For a good selection buy the<br />

packets of tubers that are available<br />

now in garden centres. They can be<br />

planted out next month. The list of<br />

varieties available is immense. The<br />

height of plants can range from<br />

30cm to 75cm depending on variety,<br />

and colours from pure white to<br />

palest pink, red, burgundy, gold or<br />

bronze.<br />

Escallonia the flowering hedge<br />

DIY propagation tubes<br />

It is always good to find a new way to recycle<br />

household goods a first time in-house, before<br />

they are relegated to the recycle bin. Toilet<br />

paper rolls are a commodity that any gardener<br />

can easily put to good use. They make perfect<br />

pots for propagating cuttings or planting<br />

seeds, and once<br />

established your<br />

new plant can be<br />

popped straight<br />

into the ground<br />

without disturbing<br />

the roots and the<br />

cardboard will<br />

break down in the<br />

ground.<br />

1. Squash the empty<br />

roll flat, creasing<br />

the sides together,<br />

open it up and match the creases together and<br />

squash again. This will give you a square tube.<br />

2. With sharp scissors cut from the bottom a cut<br />

approximately 2.5cm long up each folded line.<br />

3. Fold the four side flaps that have been made<br />

inwards, overlapping to make a bottom of the<br />

new tube planter.<br />

4. Once folded sit the bottom of the tube into<br />

water until soft. Then stand it upright with a<br />

weight on top until dried. This will stick the card<br />

together.<br />

5. Now you are ready to plant. Remember to use<br />

seed raising mix or propagation mix.<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 71<br />

Garden <strong>Life</strong>


Garden <strong>Life</strong><br />

Jobs this Month<br />

<strong>June</strong><br />

Times Past<br />

HOMES BY THE SEA: The first actual clubhouse<br />

(the old cricket clubhouse from<br />

Careel Bay) in the 1950s (main)<br />

before replacement; the initial clubhouse<br />

structure relocated from the 4th tee of<br />

the golf club; the new clubhouse built in<br />

1972 after the former burnt down; the<br />

Club’s first Bronze Squad in March, 1941.<br />

Slug fest<br />

Garden <strong>Life</strong><br />

Lawns have suffered badly<br />

though the wet Autumn<br />

days. The ground has<br />

been too wet to mow the<br />

grass that is now long and<br />

lanky. Once the ground dries<br />

out, reduce the length of the<br />

grass over a couple of cuts.<br />

If you expose the roots and<br />

we are lucky enough to have<br />

a warm sunny day, the roots<br />

will burn. The grass will need<br />

to harden up slowly.<br />

Colour bond<br />

Winter gardens can be just<br />

as bright and cheerful as<br />

in Summer. Look around at<br />

the trees and shrubs that<br />

are flowering now. Scarlet<br />

poinsettias, soft pink tree<br />

dahlias, kangaroo paws,<br />

bright yellow Xanthostemon<br />

Expo Gold trees (below),<br />

Camellias, multi coloured<br />

pentas, begonias and<br />

polyanthus. If you have a dull<br />

spot in the garden visit the<br />

nursery and look around.<br />

Clean up<br />

Clean up deciduous blossom<br />

and fruiting trees this month,<br />

once the trees are bare. Spray<br />

with copper or lime sulphur<br />

to destroy and fungal spores<br />

after the wet Autumn season<br />

before they affect the new<br />

spring growth.<br />

Tale of tape<br />

Seed tapes are the easy way<br />

to sow veggies but make sure<br />

that you thin out the seedlings<br />

as they grow. Choose the<br />

strongest seedlings and pull<br />

out the others. Overcrowding<br />

stops development.<br />

Harvest crops<br />

Time to harvest root crops<br />

now if you haven’t already<br />

done so. Jerusalem artichokes,<br />

sweet potatoes and potatoes<br />

should all be dug. So that you<br />

can plant your next crops.<br />

Rain can bring out the strangest creatures. We all know<br />

the leopard slug that helps to keep down the snail<br />

population but how many have seen the enormous Red<br />

Triangle slug? It is not uncommon, but it usually is only<br />

seen in wet weather or at night. Unlike the leopard slug it<br />

is vegetarian, living on lichens and mould. They’re usually<br />

only found in damp leaf litter or in the bark of trees. After<br />

all the rain these ghostly slugs are helping to clean the<br />

mildew and mould from the pavers in my garden!<br />

Lilium time<br />

Plant liliums to flower for<br />

Christmas. Read the packets<br />

and choose carefully there<br />

are many different varieties,<br />

some for pots and others for<br />

the garden.<br />

Rust watch<br />

Frangipani rust is hard to<br />

beat. Clean up all fallen<br />

leaves and destroy them.<br />

Once the tree is bare spray<br />

with lime sulphur to kill the<br />

spore. Spray the soil beneath<br />

and the surrounding area.<br />

The spores lie dormant over<br />

Winter to grow again in<br />

Spring. A follow-up spray next<br />

month will help.<br />

Fruitful yield<br />

Plant new strawberry plants<br />

this month. They have very<br />

pretty foliage and are great<br />

ground cover plants in the<br />

veggie garden to control<br />

the weeds! Add some slowrelease<br />

fertiliser to the soil<br />

before planting and plant the<br />

new plants 30cm apart. Tuck<br />

them in with a mulch of straw.<br />

Also consider a blueberry<br />

bush. Blueberry Burst is the<br />

best variety for our frost-free<br />

area. They are easy to grow.<br />

Feed them with Kahoona for a<br />

wonderful crop.<br />

Crossword solution from page 65<br />

Mystery location: CRYSTAL BAY<br />

Early days North Palm Beach SLSC<br />

According to records<br />

held at Surf <strong>Life</strong> Saving<br />

New South Wales, in<br />

the 1930s there was an early<br />

attempt to form a life-saving<br />

service and club at North<br />

Palm Beach. It was called the<br />

‘Surf Bathers Club’, made up<br />

of surfing enthusiasts from<br />

the camping area. Some of<br />

these would have been ‘permanent<br />

residents’ and some<br />

transient or simply frequent<br />

visitors as holiday makers.<br />

They met initially in the Beacon<br />

Store in 1939.<br />

Later it became known<br />

as the ‘Barrenjoey Surfers<br />

Club’; however it was forced<br />

to disband at the outbreak of<br />

World War II due to a lack of<br />

members.<br />

Although it was never affiliated<br />

with the SLSA of Australia,<br />

10 members gained<br />

their Bronze medallions in<br />

1941 before it disbanded.<br />

One group (of the usual six<br />

in those days) passed on 23<br />

March and a second group of<br />

four (with two substitutes) on<br />

14 December the same year.<br />

In January 1941, Warringah<br />

Shire Council (WSC) received<br />

a request for permission to<br />

form the Barrenjoey Surf <strong>Life</strong><br />

Saving Club (SLSC), specifically<br />

to patrol the northern<br />

end of Palm Beach.<br />

The Council agreed to the<br />

request, provided the Club<br />

became affiliated with the<br />

Surf <strong>Life</strong> Saving Association,<br />

although there is no record<br />

of this occurring.<br />

Probably as the result of<br />

the success of the first squad<br />

in March 1941, the Barrenjoey<br />

SLSC requested permission<br />

to erect a small structure in<br />

a central position overlooking<br />

Barrenjoey surf beach for<br />

the housing of a surf reel,<br />

box line and box lifesaving<br />

gear. The structure was to<br />

be a temporary one because<br />

the Club was hoping to get<br />

permission in future to erect<br />

a permanent clubhouse when<br />

the Club began to actively patrol<br />

the beach on Saturdays,<br />

Sundays and holidays.<br />

The group hoping to form<br />

as the Club noted that the<br />

Palm Beach Golf Club had<br />

offered to give them a shelter<br />

shed by the 4th tee later in<br />

1941 if the group re-erected<br />

the shed.<br />

Council agreed to the<br />

proposal but only after the<br />

Works Committee approved<br />

the site following an inspection<br />

in company with the<br />

Club’s representatives.<br />

It’s clear they received approval<br />

because later that year<br />

in November the Council received<br />

a request “… that the<br />

front portion of the recently<br />

erected surf sheds at Bar-<br />

renjoey Beach be enclosed for<br />

the purpose of protecting the<br />

life-saving gear and offering<br />

to bear the cost if the Council<br />

will carry out the work”.<br />

This shed is most likely the<br />

one in the picture which appears<br />

on the beach proper but<br />

in the mid-1940s was replaced<br />

by the Careel Bay cricket club<br />

building on the site of the<br />

present surf club. The club<br />

shared the building with the<br />

Palm Beach Kindergarten.<br />

* Are you a family member<br />

or relative who could add to<br />

this story? Email readers@<br />

pittwaterlife.com.au<br />

TIMES PAST is supplied by<br />

local historian and President<br />

of the Avalon Beach<br />

Historical Society GEOFF<br />

SEARL. Visit the Society’s<br />

showroom in Bowling Green<br />

Lane, Avalon Beach.<br />

Times Past<br />

72 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

The Local Voice Since 1991<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> 73


Travel <strong>Life</strong><br />

Travel <strong>Life</strong><br />

Relax and sail with Seven Seas<br />

Regent’s Seven Seas Explorer – touted<br />

“The Most Luxurious Ship Ever Built” – is<br />

bringing unrivalled luxury to cruising close<br />

to home in the upcoming 2023-24 season.<br />

Travel View’s Gail Kardash says the<br />

flagship vessel earned her reputation for<br />

many reasons:<br />

“Among them, her spacious,<br />

all-balcony suites; ‘Unrivalled<br />

Space at Sea’ with exceptionally<br />

high space per guest ratio;<br />

fine dining with no additional<br />

charges; and personalised<br />

service,” Gail said.<br />

“The attention to detail<br />

throughout the ship is<br />

astounding – Seven Seas Explorer features<br />

a 2,220-piece art collection that includes<br />

pieces by Picasso and Chagall; more than<br />

470 handmade crystal chandeliers; 400<br />

custom-made Versace place settings in<br />

the Compass Rose restaurant; and 4,262<br />

square metres, or about half a hectare, of<br />

exquisite marble flooring and bathrooms.”<br />

She recommends you make a note in<br />

your travel diary for next year’s all-inclusive<br />

voyage from Bali to Sydney, tailor-made for<br />

travellers eager to cruise close to home.<br />

“On 5 December 2023, Explorer departs<br />

Bali for her 17-night voyage to Sydney,<br />

calling at Lombok, Komodo, Cairns and<br />

Airlie Beach along the way,” said Gail.<br />

“A full day and overnight stay in Bali<br />

allows time to see the island’s beautiful<br />

terraced rice fields, visit villages where<br />

local artisans create<br />

traditional wood<br />

carvings, batik cloth<br />

and jewellery, and<br />

learn about Balinese dance and its ancient<br />

culture.”<br />

Gail said Regent also provides guests in<br />

all suite categories a FREE 3-Night Beautiful<br />

Bali pre-cruise land program or FREE<br />

2-Night Sensational Sydney post-cruise land<br />

program on this voyage.<br />

“Consider the land programs as a unique<br />

reward for guests to make the most of<br />

their holiday after being unable to journey<br />

beyond our own borders for almost two<br />

years.”<br />

Making the prospect of setting sail<br />

again even more exciting, Gail said you’ll<br />

enjoy every luxury included – not only are<br />

beverages, speciality dining, WiFi, laundry<br />

and gratuities covered, all voyages feature<br />

unlimited included shore excursions at<br />

every port.<br />

“These carefully curated shore excursions<br />

are unique to Regent – guests are able<br />

to enjoy as many shoreside tours and<br />

experiences as they wish, as part of their<br />

cruise. On this featured sailings, guests<br />

can select from up to 34 included shore<br />

excursions.”<br />

* Contact Travel View for more details<br />

and ask about their exclusive US$400<br />

Shipboard Credit per suite for the Bali<br />

to Sydney cruise; and to learn more<br />

about Regent Seven Seas Cruises, book<br />

your place at Travel View’s information<br />

event on Wednesday 22 <strong>June</strong>. Register<br />

by calling 9918 4444 or email sales@<br />

traveview.net.au<br />

74 JUNE <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Local Voice Since 1991

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!